Energy News  
Anti-whalers set to resume hounding Japanese fleet

The hunt begins.
by Staff Writers
Sydney (AFP) Feb 14, 2008
A ship carrying militant anti-whaling activists was due to head back to Antarctic waters Thursday to resume harassing Japanese whalers, the Sea Shepherd Conservation Society said.

The group's ship the Steve Irwin has been in port in Melbourne, Australia for 12 days to refuel and take on supplies after weeks of pursuing the Japanese whaling fleet in the Southern Ocean.

"A special thank you to Australia," the group's leader Paul Watson said in a message posted on Sea Shepherd's website. "You helped to send the Steve Irwin back to sea as a Valentine's Day gift to the whales."

Donations of cash, food and supplies had "flooded onto the decks of the whale conservation ship" while it was in port, the statement said, adding that it was due to leave for Antarctic waters on Thursday night.

The Steve Irwin intends to "harass and intervene" against the whalers for the next four to five weeks in an effort to prevent them hunting until the end of the season.

"In January we prevented them from slaughtering whales for three weeks, we cost the Japanese over two million dollars in fuel during the pursuit and we exposed their illegal whaling activities worldwide, and most importantly we got the story into the Japanese media," said Watson.

"This provoked a real debate in Japan on the cost of whaling to Japan's reputation."

On January 15, two activists from the Steve Irwin boarded a Japanese harpoon ship to deliver a protest note, setting off a two-day stand-off before they were released to an Australian customs vessel.

An international moratorium bans the slaughter of whales for commercial purposes but Japan exploits a loophole which allows the animals to be killed for scientific research and targeted 1,000 this season.

Watson said that next year Sea Shepherd intends to return to the Southern Ocean with a second ship "with the objective of mounting a non-stop pursuit."

The environmental group Greenpeace had also hounded the Japanese whalers but abandoned the chase for the season after running low on fuel in late January.

Community
Email This Article
Comment On This Article

Related Links
Follow the Whaling Debate



Memory Foam Mattress Review
Newsletters :: SpaceDaily :: SpaceWar :: TerraDaily :: Energy Daily
XML Feeds :: Space News :: Earth News :: War News :: Solar Energy News


Australia has 'shocking' evidence of Japan's whaling: minister
Sydney (AFP) Feb 7, 2008
Australia has "shocking" photographic evidence to back an international legal bid to stop Japanese whaling in Antarctic waters, the government said Thursday.







  • Gage Provides Fuels For 2008 SAE Clean Snowmobile Challenge
  • Peabody Energy CEO Calls Clean Coal The Primary Sustainable Choice For Growing Energy Needs
  • Analysis: Big Oil tackles climate change
  • Project Targets Commercial Viability For Enhanced Geothermal Systems

  • Iran feeding uranium gas into centrifuges: diplomat
  • Triple Five Energy Enters Saskatchewan With Major Undertakings
  • India, Russia agree to cooperate in civil nuclear power, boost trade
  • Lithuania, Poland sign power deal, spurring nuclear plan

  • Satellite Data To Deliver State-Of-The-Art Air Quality Information
  • New Model Revises Estimates Of Terrestrial Carbon Dioxide Uptake
  • A Breathable Earth
  • Researchers Find Origin Of Breathable Atmosphere Half A Billion Years Ago

  • First Datasets For US Biomass And Carbon Dataset Now Available
  • Skin disease linked with deforestation
  • No amnesty for Amazon deforestation: Brazil
  • FAO warns of 'alarming' loss of mangroves

  • Small farmers speak out against globalisation
  • EU orders China to prove that rice is GMO free
  • US store chain cuts sales of food from China
  • Drought cuts 10 percent off Australian agricultural production

  • Carbon Capture Strategy Could Lead To Emission-Free Cars
  • India competes to draw big-name automakers
  • London plans to punish gas-guzzling vehicles
  • Analysis: New RFS law already under fire

  • Military Aircraft To Perform Aviation Safety Research
  • Flapping-wing airplanes are envisioned
  • British-designed jet could reach Australia in under five hours
  • Birds Bats And Insects Hold Secrets For Aerospace Engineers

  • Nuclear Power In Space - Part 2
  • Outside View: Nuclear future in space
  • Nuclear Power In Space

  • The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2007 - SpaceDaily.AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by SpaceDaily on any Web page published or hosted by SpaceDaily. Privacy Statement