MEPs urge Norway to stop whaling
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-MEPs call on Norway to cease all its commercial whaling operations
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-Whale meat should no longer transit through EU i ports
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-Norway has killed over 13,000 whales despite international moratorium
Norway has killed over 13,000 whales since the moratorium came into effect in 1986 © AP Images/European Union/EP
Norway must halt its whale hunting and the EU must ensure that no whale meat transits through its ports, MEPs insist in a resolution voted on Tuesday.
MEPs urge Norway to “cease all its commercial whaling operations” and to abide by the International Whaling Commission (IWC) moratorium. They ask the European Commission to provide data on shipments of whale meat transferred through EU ports.
The EU should look into all possible ways to ensure that whale meat no longer transits through EU ports, including a ban if need be, they add.
Quick facts
MEPs note that the IWC moratorium on all commercial whaling was imposed in 1982, came into effect in 1986, and is still in force. Norway has nonetheless continued its whaling activities, and fully resumed commercial whaling in 1993, citing a formal objection to the moratorium.
Norway has killed over 13,000 whales since the moratorium came into effect, and unilaterally establishes its own catch limits. For the 2017 season, it increased its quota of whales to 999, up from 880 in 2016. Norway’s exports of whale meat have grown sharply in recent years.