Fin whale meat again on the menu in Japan for first time in almost 50 years

13 December 2024, 08:04

Buyers inspecting whale meat in Japan
Japan Whale Meat. Picture: PA

Japan’s Fisheries Agency this year added fin whales to its list of three whale species that can be legally hunted.

Meat from fin whales caught for the first time in nearly 50 years off Japan’s northern coast fetched up to about £1,030 per kilo at auction.

Japan’s Fisheries Agency this year added fin whales to its list of three whale species that can be legally hunted as the country expands commercial whaling along its coast.

Japan resumed commercial whaling within its exclusive economic zone after withdrawing from the International Whaling Commission in 2019. The IWC designated the fin whale as a species for protection from overhunting in 1976.

Japan said its recent stock surveys confirmed a sufficient recovery of fin whale populations in the North Pacific.

Japan Whale Meat
Fresh meat of fin whales displayed on tray at a fish market in Shimonoseki, Japan (Shimonoseki City, Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries Maintenance Division via AP)

Officials said 30 of the whales – half of the quota of 60 – were caught this season. Japan set a combined catch quota of 379 for the three other whale species: minke, Bryde’s and sei whales.

The country’s only large-scale whaling fleet operator, Kyodo Senpaku, launched the Kangei Maru – a 9,300-ton new ship – this year in a show of determination to stay in the industry.

On Thursday, about 1.4 tonnes of fresh meat from several fin whales caught off Japan’s northern main island of Hokkaido was auctioned at the Sapporo fish market and the Kangei Maru’s home port of Shimonoseki.

In Shimonoseki, where 250 kilos of fin whale meat was flown from Hokkaido for the event, the tail meat – a delicacy known as “onomi” – fetched the day’s highest price at 200,000 yen (£1,039) per kilo, according to the city’s fishery promotion department.

“We hear the larger the whale, the better the taste, so I assume fin whales are more delicious than other kinds of whales, though I never had a chance to taste it and cannot compare,” city official Ryo Minezoe said.

Japan’s whaling has long been a source of controversy and criticism from conservationists.

But anti-whaling protests have largely subsided after Japan switched from much-criticised Antarctic “research whaling” – seen as a cover for commercial hunts – to commercial whaling off the country’s waters.

Last year, Japanese whalers caught 294 minke, Bryde’s and sei whales – less than 80% of the quota and fewer than the number once hunted in the Antarctic and the north-western Pacific under the research program.

Whaling officials link the declining catch to climate change, but critics say overhunting may be the cause.

Nanami Kurasawa, who heads a conservationist group Dolphin and Whale Action Network, opposes resuming hunts of fin whales, saying they had gone nearly extinct after overhunt decades ago and their details around the Japanese coasts are not fully researched.

Whalers want to go after larger whales because of efficiency, but they should more thoroughly investigate whale stock, she says.

Whale meat in Japan was an affordable source of protein for the country’s malnourished population in the years following the Second World War, with annual consumption peaking at 233,000 tons in 1962.

Other meats have largely replaced whale and supply has since fallen to about 2,000 tons in recent years, Fisheries Agency statistics show.

By Press Association

Latest World News

See more Latest World News

Former president Evo Morales

Bolivian judge orders arrest of ex-president Evo Morales in sex abuse case

TikTok app logo

US Supreme Court upholds law banning TikTok

Judge Tanya Chutkan

Judge warns Capitol riot could ‘happen again’ as Trump supporter jailed

Workers continue with the finishing touches on the presidential reviewing stand

Trump to take oath inside due to freezing temperatures

Ryanair (Buzz) Boeing 737-8AS (REG: SP-RNB) modified with MAX style winglets.

Ryanair flight from London aborts landing after plane's GPS signal is 'jammed' near Russian border

SpaceX Starship launch

SpaceX craft was destroyed by fire after fuel leak, tests suggest

TikTok has been banned in the US.

TikTok to be banned in the US from Sunday, Supreme Court rules

Mr Putin and his Iranian counterpart shake hands

Russian and Iranian leaders sign partnership treaty in Kremlin

A private bathhouse recently discovered in the Pompeii archaeological site

New Pompeii excavation reveals private thermal complex built 2,000 years ago

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu convenes his security Cabinet to vote on a ceasefire deal

Israeli Security Cabinet recommends approval of ceasefire in Gaza

The Israeli Security Council has approved the Gaza ceasefire deal

Israeli security cabinet recommends approving Gaza ceasefire deal as hostages to be released in days

Olaf Scholz

Musk support for European far-right ‘completely unacceptable’ – German leader

Abbe Pierre

Church calls for judicial investigation into Abbe Pierre amid new abuse claims

Iranian and Russian leaders shake hands

Russian and Iranian leaders meet before signing partnership treaty

Joe Biden smiles

Biden sets record by commuting sentences of 2,500 people over drug offences

Destroyed buildings are seen from an U.S. Air Force plane flying over the Gaza Strip

Israel’s security cabinet convenes over deal to release hostages and pause war