杏吧原创

Norway loses its appetite for whale meat

The country will not fill its whale-hunting quota this year, fuelling claims by environmentalists that there is no longer a demand for the meat

Whales seem to be off the menu in Norway. The country will not fill its whale-hunting quota this year, fuelling claims by environmentalists that there is no longer a demand for the meat.

Norway resumed commercial whaling in 1993 and is the only country to do so, but fishermen have so far caught fewer than half of the 1052 whales they are allocated. The season ends on 31 August.

Although the government blames bad weather and high fuel prices for the low catch, environmentalists say fewer whales have been caught this year because demand has fallen, and say the industry should no longer be supported. 鈥淭he whale meat is eaten in high latitudes by small populations, so the government hasn鈥檛 been pushing a drive to sell it,鈥 says Claire Bass of the Environmental Investigation Agency (EIA).

Japan鈥檚 whaling fleet, meanwhile, returned home this week with over 2000 tonnes of whale meat. The handful of animals the IWC allows for 鈥渞esearch鈥 purposes has turned into 1500 a year, despite demand also decreasing in Japan. 鈥淭here鈥檚 no scientific proof that stocks are high enough for any whale hunts to be sustainable,鈥 Bass says.