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Sakyo Noda (Japanese Campaigner) and Melanie Duchin (US Campaigner) on the bridge of the MY Esperanza.
Enlarge Image"The normal whale research program ends around late March, so we still have three to four weeks left and the fleet is going to continue with the work there," Mr Inwood has been saying. He even told Radio New Zealand "we might even start whaling again as soon as today".
"We" doesn't seem to include the whalers themselves. Yesterday, our campaigner Sakyo spoke to the whaling fleet's expedition leader via radio,
and asked him if the fleet were starting whaling again - the answer was no. He added that there
was still a lot of work to be done on the ship. They have managed to
start the main engine, but the winch is broken down - due oil
pressure problems - and the ship has yet to move under her own power.
We might not be a signatory to anything
down here, but Japan is - to the Antarctic Treaty. The Antarctic conditions are no
laughing matter. Not only has one person lost their life, but
we've got a drifting whaling factory ship, an environmental threat, and
dozens of crewmen working in the tough conditions of the
Ross Sea. It seems unlikely that the
whaling fleet's expedition leader, who is currently trying to deal with
a broken-down 8,000-ton ship, has the
time and inclination to make up stories "for a laugh", not to mention that the captain of the chaser ship the Yushin Maru told Maritime New Zealand the same thing.
Mr Inwood also likes to say that there is absolutely no threat to the Antarctic environment from the Nisshin Maru. Unfortunately, unlike the Esperanza, none of the Japanese whaling fleet is "ice class" - meaning they are not are built to deal with severe sea ice conditions.
Not recognising a potential "threat" to the pristine Antarctic environment that could be sparked off by some adverse weather conditions leaves Mr Inwood looking a little short on his understanding of geography, meteorology and physics. There's a reported 1,000 tons of oil on board the stranded factory ship. Also with the fleet is a fuel tanker, the Oriental Bluebird, flagged to Panama, that has not filed an Environmental Impact Assessment in accordance with the Antarctic Treaty.
Actually, none of the vessels in
the whaling fleet have submitted environmental impact assessments
(EIA). Because the whaling fleet claims that it is only answerable to the
International Whaling Commission, it doesn't follow Antarctic Treaty
procedure. One such procedure is the Madrid Protocol, which subjects all activities taking place in the Treaty
area to prior scrutiny for how they might affect the environment here - including through fires like the one on the Nisshin Maru.