Japan has withdrawn from the International Whaling Commission, and the Japanese whaling fleet has abandoned their so-called “research whaling” to resume commercial whaling for the first time in 31 years. That is the bad news.
There is another way to look at the story, whoever. Japan has withdrawn from Antarctic whaling, is limiting new commercial whaling to Japanese territorial waters and is reducing the number of whales killed by 30 – 75%, depending on how you do the math.
Previously, Japan had allowed roughly 900 whales to be taken in “research whaling.” They often came in with far fewer whales. The last season of research whaling yielded 333 whales. The new commercial whaling quotas will allow 227 whales to be killed. So, while the resumption of commercial whaling is not good news, the Japanese will be killing fewer whales in a more restricted area, reflecting the continued decline in Japanese whaling overall.