This is our priority campaign for the year, and we are investing a great deal of time
and resources to this campaign
The
campaign will begin in December when our flagship the Farley Mowat will depart
from Melbourne, Australia, on a course south to the coast of Antarctica. Our objective
will be to hunt down the Japanese whaling fleet and oppose their illegal whaling operations.
This
will be our second attempt at searching for this fleet. The lesson we learned from
our first attempt is that to be successful, we require aerial surveillance. This year
we intend have air power and that is one of the priority goals for our
fundraising efforts.
The Japanese whale kill is illegal and we will be acting in accordance with the United
Nations World Charter for Nature in our intervention.
The Japanese are violating the Southern Ocean Sanctuary. They are violating the International
Whaling Commission (IWC) moratorium on commercial whaling. They are targeting endangered
fin and humpback whales that are protected under the Convention
on the Trade in Endangered Species of Flora and Fauna. (CITES). The Japanese are
also in violation of the Australian laws protecting the Australian Antarctic Territorial
waters.
Sea Shepherd is not going to the water of Antarctica to protest whaling. We are going
there to intervene with the purpose of upholding international laws protecting the whales.
Are Whales in Danger of Extinction?
The Japanese claim on their website that their whale "research" does not pose any risk
to the current status of whale populations.
This is, of course, not true. The Atlantic gray whale was exterminated by whalers, both
the Eastern and Western populations. In the Pacific, the Western populations of grays
have been reduced to only a few hundred. The Eastern population has recovered since 1911
when it was reduced to less than 1,000 animals.
It was whaling that has placed the blue, fin, humpback, bowhead, sperm, and right whales
on the Endangered Species List.
Now, Japan is targeting whales that are still listed as endangered.
But whaling is not the only threat to the survival of the whales. Reduction in plankton
populations in the Southern Oceans from ozone depletion and global warming is a significant
factor. Pollution and collisions with ships are other major factors.
It is the position of Sea Shepherd Conservation Society that all whaling activity should
be abolished and that international conservation laws be enforced to prevent further
predation by outlaw whaling nations like Japan, Iceland, and Norway.
Please
support our efforts to save whales — we turn your support
into action!