In February, the Japanese government held a meeting in Tokyo to “normalise” the IWC. As we reported, it seemed that “normalise” means “business as usual” – in this case, keep catching whales. Denmark was one of the countries participating in the meeting. Because of statements made by the Danish commissioner, the Danish Foreign Affairs Minister is under pressure.
In the near future the minister has to explain the Danish IWC position to parliament - a debate that is desperately needed.
Poland is a country that supports protection of whales and would like to see the moratorium on commercial whaling stay in place. But it can only do this if it is a member of the IWC. Poland has started to join but time is running out. The next IWC is in May 2007 in Anchorage, Alaska.
The six-ship whaling fleet has left Japan, and is headed directly to the Southern Ocean. 945 whales, including ten endangered fin whales, will be killed - unless we do something to save them.
Post your ideas on how to save whales.
We'll read every idea and you'll see the best ones put into action.
Stop Icelandic whaling
Iceland is a stunning, pristine land that attracts hundreds of thousands of tourists each year, many of them to go whale watching in the clear arctic waters. Greenpeace has launched a "Whale tourism pledge" -- a promise to visit Iceland if the government stops whaling.
With every tourist worth an average of US$ 1,169 to the Icelandic economy, the tens of thousands of pledges to date represent more than 100 million USD in potential tourist revenue for Iceland -- against a commercial whaling programme which was worth less than 4 million USD per annum in its prime in the 1980s, and is today effectively worthless.
During its few months of operation cyanide and other contaminants from the Australian-owned mine on Rapu Rapu Island, Philippines, spilled into the sea, resulting in massive fish kills.
The Lafayette Project is financed through a syndicate of banks including ANZ Investment Bank and ABN AMRO Bank NV (Australian Branch) in clear breach of their environmental policies.
Illegal fishing in no-take zones are turning the beaches of Orissa on the east coast of India into a mass graveyard for the endangered Olive Ridley turtles. Tell the Prime Minister of India to take action to protect these beautiful creatures.
Ask questions
Find out where your fish is from - let the people who sell you fish know you care where it comes from. Check out our introductory guide to some of the most popular endangered seafood out there and start talking!
There's a whole page of banners for you to choose from. Take your pick, grab the html and add it to your web page.
Change your email signature to link to us:
Most of us send and receive email every day (some of us quite a lot of it!), so spread the word by linking to us in your email sig. As a suggestion, a certain Greenpeace staffer changed his to:
--- Don't just be a drop in the ocean. Join with us and make some waves. Sign up to join us on our year-long journey and act to defend our oceans. It's free.
http://oceans.greenpeace.org/defenders ---- (He also changed his vacation auto-reply to say he'd only get back to people on his return if they signed up as an Ocean Defender -- cheeky!) You could also change your answering machine message (or your family's machine, like one of our blog readers did!)
We have designed an action kit containing templates for posters and stickers that you can print out. Take a photo of the poster outside a local landmark or anywhere else in your community to represent where you live and show the world that we are united in our call for an end to whaling. You can upload the photo to the Ocean Defender flickr group here and find other Ocean Defenders worldwide. You could also upload the pics and comments to other blogs and really get the message out there. Download your kit!
Got an idea?
Share your own ideas!
Got ideas for how to end commercial whaling? Post them here!