http://www.planetark.org/dailynewsstory.cfm/newsid/16097/story.htm
Planet Ark :
Norway seeks to destroy whale blubber mountain

NORWAY: May 23, 2002

OSLO - Norway offered whalers a tiny cash payment yesterday to 
destroy a 1,000-tonne blubber mountain after failing to entice Japan 
to import the fat as an expensive delicacy.

Whalers said that the offer, of four Norwegian crowns ($0.49) a kilo 
(2.2 lbs) to help get rid of ageing blubber packed into freezers in 
northern Norway, was too low.

Norway's whalers have been stockpiling blubber since Norway resumed 
commercial hunts of minke whales in 1993 in defiance of a moratorium 
by the International Whaling Commission (IWC), which is currently 
holding an annual meeting in Japan.

The whalers had been hoping to export the creamy fat to Japan, where 
blubber is a delicacy and might be worth 150 crowns a kilo. But that 
plan failed to take off even though Norway gave an official green 
light for exports last year.

"This is old blubber that has been in store so long that there is no 
market for it," Johan Williams, director general at the Fisheries 
Ministry, told Reuters.

"This doesn't mean we've given up the idea of exports," he added. 
Norwegians dislike blubber, which whalers say stays edible even after 
several years in a freezer, and only eat the minke whale meat.

If destroyed, the fat might end up as fuel in a power station.

Norway's export plans, defying a convention on trade in endangered 
species, have stalled with some Japanese consumer groups saying 
Norwegian whale meat contains cancer-causing chemicals from the North 
Atlantic.

"It's good that the ministry is trying to help. But four crowns a 
kilo won't even cover transport costs," Jan Kristiansen, representing 
whalers, told Norway's NTB news agency.

"The buyers have paid up to seven crowns for the blubber, so they 
will lose," he said. He said that Norway and Japan seemed happy not 
to push for exports to avert international protests - a charge denied 
by Williams.

"We're not going to pay for everything. We expect that both the 
buyers who speculated in profits from blubber and the fishermen 
should contribute to this project," he said.

The IWC has repeatedly rejected pleas by Norway, Japan and Iceland to 
approve a resumption of whaling.

The whaling nations argue that stocks of minke whales are plentiful, 
unlike other species like the giant blue whale. Norway has set a 
quota of 674 minke whales for this season.

Story by Alister Doyle

REUTERS NEWS SERVICE


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