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Tinned whale meat from Japan! In the name of science?
TESCO LINKED TO SALES OF WHALE MEAT IN JAPAN
Tinned whale meat from Japan
Leading UK retailer, Tesco PLC, has been closely linked to the sale of products from Japan's controversial hunting of whales, dolphins and porpoises (collectively known as cetaceans), revealed the Environmental Investigation Agency (EIA) and Greenpeace today.
EIA investigations have revealed that C Two-Network, a Japanese supermarket chain and a member of the Tesco Group, sells canned cetaceans products in 32 of its 78 stores and fresh cetaceans products in 10 stores.
Tesco purchased more than 95% of the Japanese company in July 2003.
The canned products are sourced from the Nissui and Kyokuyo whaling companies. These companies own shares in the whaling fleet used for Japan's self-professed 'scientific' whaling research and sell much of the meat from the hundreds of minke, Bryde's and sei whales that are killed each year in the name of science.
According to staff working at the supermarkets, C Two-Network also sells fresh meat from 'toothed whales', a generic term for dolphins, porpoises, and small whales hunted in Japan's coastal waters.
Japan's scientific whaling has been strongly and repeatedly criticised by the UK Government and the international community and is widely recognised as commercial whaling.
Japan's coastal hunting of dolphins, porpoises and small whales is poorly regulated and unsustainable. Meat and blubber products from these hunts typically carry levels of methylmercury or PCBs (polychlorinated biphenyls) that exceed government recommended limits, posing a health threat to the consumer.
Clare Perry, EIA Cetacean Campaigns Manager said: "C Two-Network are selling internationally protected species, and as such, are not only sustaining the market for these products in Japan, but are supporting Japan's refusal to abide by the international ban on commercial whaling."
Greenpeace Ocean Campaigner, Richard Page said:
"We are appealing to Tesco to use its ownership of C Two-Network to bring about an end to the sale of cetacean products in C Two-Network stores.
Tesco's UK customers will be appalled to learn that Tesco is so closely linked to the sale of whale meat."
Source:
greenpeace.org.uk
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Most RecentMost Recommended Comments (4)
at 04:11 on October 30th, 2009
Gross!
at 08:46 on October 30th, 2009
I've tried to express my opinion on this, but words fail me. It is criminal for Tesco to sell endangered species for profit.
at 09:10 on October 30th, 2009
Tinned whale meat from Japan! In the name of science? More than 400,000 dolphins, killed in Japanese waters
at 13:47 on November 1st, 2009
Upload feito em 1º de novembro de 2009
por MIRIAM GODET
Banned trade in whale meat is picking up
Icelandic whalers bring in season's first big catches
Icelandic whale hunters have brought in their first big catches of the season, two fin whales weighing around 35 tonnes each, an AFP photographer witnessed Friday. The boat, Hvalur 9, arrived overnight Thursday to Friday at the port of Akranes, 20 kilometres (12 miles) north of capital Reykjavik, towing the bodies of the 20 metre (65 foot) long mammals.
The huge whales were swiftly carved up to separate the blubber from the meat, and a piece of meat was tasted by an inspector to check the quality. Environmental campaign group Greenpeace condemned the catch, saying Iceland would pay a high price for continuing the controversial practice.
"What little profit (the whaler) may take from this fin whale hunt will come at a great cost to Iceland - economically and politically," warned Sara Holden, Greenpeace International's whale campaign coordinator. Iceland's whaling season opened on May 26, amid fierce opposition from environmental groups angered by a sharp rise in quotas this year.
Iceland increased its quota to 100 minke whales and 150 fin whales, from a quota of 40 minke whales and nine fin whales last year. Many species of whales are now endangered and hunting of the marine mammal was officially banned with a moratorium in 1986.
Iceland and Norway are the only two countries in the world that now authorise commercial whaling. Iceland withdrew from the moratorium in 2006, and Norway in 1993, triggering an international outcry on both occasions. Japan officially allows whaling for scientific purposes, but the meat is then sold to restaurants and supermarkets. Photo courtesy of AFP.
By Pierre-Henry Deshayes
Oslo (AFP) June 21, 2009
Despite being officially illegal, the international trade in whale meat between hunting nations is quietly picking up again, say enviromental campaigners.
The issue has become one of the flashpoints between pro- and anti-whaling campaigners in the run-up to the five-day annual meeting of the International Whaling Commission, which opens Monday.
Delegates at the conference, which this year will be in the Portuguese island of Madeira, will also debate the issue.
Japan, Norway, Iceland -- the main whaling nations -- all want to lift the ban on the trade, which is outlawed under the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species (CITES).
Despite the 1986 international moratorium on whale-hunting, Norway and Iceland have resumed whaling, having reserved their position on the moratorium. Japan uses an opt-out that allows whaling for scientific purposes.
After a gap of two decades, Japan started importing whale meat in 2008: a few dozen tonnes of Iceland whalemeat and less than 10 tonnes from Norway.
This year, the Nordic nations want to increase that amount. One Norwegian firm, Lofothval, has obtained export licences for 47 tonnes of whale meat.
Iceland plans on exporting half its quota of 100 small Minke whales and 150 Fin whales.
For Truls Gulowsen, head of environmental campaigners Greenpeace in Norway, it is a sign of their desperation.
"That shows the despair of the whaling industry, that can't sell its products in Norway and so is trying to get rid of them abroad at any price," he said.
"But the Japanese eat less and less whale meat and their warehouses are alreday full of products that the local hunters can't get rid of."
Industry professionals reject that argument. For them, the Japanese market is a promising new market offering higher prices -- even if they will not discuss the precise figures.
"Japan, that's more than 120 million inhabitants," said Rune Froevik of Lofothval.
"Certainly, some of them still have to get their palates accustomed to a product that they haven't all tasted, but they are receptive because a large part of their diet already comes from the sea.
And the Japanese consume the fat of the whale, which in Norway is considered a waste product.
"Each catch becomes more profitable because a small Minke whale contains 1.5 tonnes of meat and 500 kilos of blubber," said Froevik.
As well as their reservations over the 1986 whaling moratorium, Japan, Iceland and Norway have also questioned the need to put whales on the CITES list of endangered species.
That position leaves them free to trade among themselves in the meat.
"We have certainly tried to get the whale off this list but we have come up against political obstruction," said Oeystein Stoerkersen, who heads up Norway's Directorate for Nature Management.
"The experts, including those abroad, agree that the species we are hunting are not under threat, but certain decision-makers in the United States, Britain and in Germany or France are trying to scrounge votes by pandering to ill-informed public opinion," he said.
According to the International Whaling Commission's scientific committee, the North Atlantic has 30,000 Fin whales and 174,000 Minke whales.
For Norway that is enough to allow the harpooning of about 1,000 whales a year.
SOURCE:
www.terradaily.com/reports/Banned_trade_in_whale_meat_is_...
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