PRESS RELEASE - DAY 4 – 14 JULY 2011
The meeting opened with continued discussion of the safety at sea
issue that began on Day 3.
The
Commission agreed by consensus a Resolution. The Resolution inter alia
reiterated that the Commission condemns any actions that are a risk to human
life and property and that this is not the way to pursue the resolution of
different view regarding whales and whaling. It also recognises the importance
of the International Maritime Organisation with respect to safety at sea; and
encourages all governments to fulfil their obligations under IMO and UNCLOS.
The Commission then moved to a discussion of Sanctuaries. The primary issue was
a proposal sponsored by Brazil and Argentina for the
creation of a South Atlantic Sanctuary. This has been a particularly
contentious item within the Commission for several years. To establish a
Sanctuary requires an amendment to the Schedule to the Convention and requires a
three-quarters majority of those voting ‘yes’ or ‘no’. It became clear during
discussions that consensus on the sanctuary was not possible. After a proposal
to take this to vote and the subsequent withdrawal of a number pro-sustainable
use member governments from the room, the Chair called a Private Commissioners’
meeting, inter alia to try to resolve a serious procedural issue with respect to
a quorum.
The
outcome of those discussions can be found here. The agenda item has been
left open until the 2012 Annual Meeting. While recognising the diversity of
views on this issue, the Commission recognises the importance of a South
Atlantic Sanctuary to many member governments. The Commission has resolved to
continue to discuss the item as the first substantive agenda item at IWC64. If
consensus cannot be reached then a decision will be taken in accord with the
Commission’s Rules of procedure.
Given the time taken to conclude the above item, the Commission was left with
very limited time to review its remaining sub-group reports including those of
the
Conservation Committee,
Infractions Sub-Committee and those items of the
Scientific Committee not yet discussed. It
endorsed those reports but agreed deferred full discussion of them until next
year. The election of a Chair and Vice-Chair of the Commission will be
undertaken by postal ballot.
The Commission was pleased to accept an invitation by the Government of Panama
to host the 64th meeting of the Commission in Panama City from 11 June to 6 July
2012.
PRESS RELEASE - DAY 3 – 13 JULY 2011
The Commission continued its extensive discussions of new and revised Rules of
Procedure throughout the morning and early afternoon. After considerable work,
the Committee agreed by consensus a
Resolution on improving the effectiveness of operations within the IWC that
also incorporated some changes to its Rules of Procedure and Financial
Regulations. In addition to the rule changes, the active parts of the resolution
included: investigating options for providing assistance to member governments
with limited means to participate actively in the Commission’s work;
establishing a working group to further consider the role of observers at
meetings of the Commission based on experience gained in that regard at IWC/63;
agreeing to regularly review its rules in the light of international good
practice and to address specific problems that may arise.
The Commission then agreed the remainder of issues under finance and
administration including adopting a budget for 2011/12 with no increase in total
expenditure.
The Committee then turned to the issue of
Aboriginal Subsistence Whaling
(ASW). This was discussed in light of the
report
of the Commission’s ASW Sub-Committee. The Commission received a summary of
the Scientific Committee’s work and then moved to consideration of strike
limits. The Commission normally sets limits for aboriginal subsistence hunts on
a five-year basis although in some cases there is a formal provision for annual
review. Traditionally, the Scientific Committee reviews its advice each year and
presents this to the Commission. This year, the Commission received this
information and made no changes to the present limits:
Bering-Chukchi-Beaufort Seas stock of bowhead whales (taken by
native people of Alaska and Chukotka) -A total of up to 280 bowhead whales can
be landed in the period 2008 - 2012, with no more than 67 whales struck in any
year (and up to 15 unused strikes may be carried over each year).
Eastern North Pacific gray whales (taken by native people of Chukotka
and Washington State) - A total catch of 620 whales is allowed for the
years 2008 - 2012 with a maximum of 140 in any one year.
East Greenland common minke whales (taken by Greenlanders) - An
annual strike limit of 12 whales is allowed for the years 2008 – 2012, with any
unused quota available to be carried forward to subsequent years provided that
no more than 3 strikes are added to the quota for any one year.
West Greenland bowhead whales (taken by Greenlanders) - An
annual strike limit of 2 whales is allowed for the years 2008 - 2012 with an
annual review by the Scientific Committee. Any unused quota can be carried
forward to subsequent years so long as not more than 2 strikes are added to the
quota for any one year.
West Greenland fin whales (taken by Greenlanders) - An annual
strike limit of 16 whales is allowed for the years 2010 - 2012. However at the
2010 Meeting Denmark and Greenland agreed to voluntarily reduce further the
catch limit for the West Greenland stock of fin whales from 16 to 10 for each of
the years 2010, 2011 and 2012.
West Greenland common minke whales (taken by Greenlanders) - An
annual strike limit of 178 whales is allowed for the years 2010 - 2012 with an
annual review by the Scientific Committee. Any unused quota can be carried
forwards so long as no more than 15 strikes are added to the quota for any one
year.
West Greenland humpback whales (taken by Greenlanders) – An
annual strike limit of 9 whales is allowed for the years 2010-2012 with an
annual review by the Scientific Committee. Any unused quota can be carried
forwards so long as not more than 2 strikes are added to the quota for any one
year.
Humpback whales taken by St Vincent and The Grenadines - For
the seasons 2008-2012 the number of humpback whales to be taken shall not exceed
20.
Next year, new block limits will need to be decided. The Commission has agreed
to establish a
small
working group to identify and consider any unresolved ASW issues with a view
to suggesting short- and longer-term ways forward on these next year.
The Commission then moved onto consideration of socio-economic implications and
small-type whaling. Japan to its longtime concern over the hardship suffered by
its four community-based whaling communities since the implementation of the
commercial whaling moratorium. It noted that in previous years, it had requested
a vote on its proposal for an interim relief catch allocation to relieve this
hardship. It noted that in a spirit of co-operation it had not requested a vote
during the discussions the future of the IWC process. Although it was
disappointed at the outcome of those discussions last year, it recognised the
improved atmosphere of discussions that process had engendered. Appreciative of
the efforts for consensus that had already occurred in discussions, it again
would refrain from asking for a vote this year.
The Commission then turned to the issue of the
Future of the IWC. Last year, it had
decided to take a pause in those discussions. This year, the Commission agreed
to: encourage continued dialogue amongst its members on the future of the IWC;
co-ordinate proposals or initiatives as widely as possible prior to submission;
continue to co-operate in taking forward the Commission’s work, notwithstanding
some fundamental differences in views.
Finally, the Commission returned to the question of obtaining visas it began on
Day 2. It received an updated version of the
Secretary’s report of this issue and a constructive discussion was held on
how to avoid such problems in the future.
PRESS RELEASE - DAY 2 - 12 JULY 2011
The Commission agreed to a new experimental procedure relating to the
participation of non-governmental organisations (NGOs) in its Plenary sessions.
At this meeting, the NGO total speaking time of up to 30 minutes will be split
over three mutually agreed items; two NGOs, one from the sustainable use side
and one from the conservation side will be allowed to speak on each item. The
Commission will review its procedures with respect to NGO participation next
year in the light of experience this year.
The first order of business concerned the question of safety at sea. The
Commission has on several occasions (examples:
Resolution 2006-2
and Resolution 2007-2)
strongly condemned dangerous activity in the Southern Ocean. This year, the
Commission was disturbed to receive reports of an escalation of such behaviour.
Progress on attempts to deal with this problem, which potentially can endanger
human life, property and the ecosystem were discussed and the Agenda Item was
left open to allow the possibility of developing a further resolution.
The next order of business related to the
report of the Finance and Administration Committee which had a
particularly busy agenda this year.
For a number of years, the Commission has been considering the merits of
separating the meetings of the Scientific Committee and the Commission, to allow
Commissioners more time to reflect upon that lengthy report and determine how
best to act upon it. This year, the Commission endorsed this separation in
principle, noting that some details remain to be worked upon. Upon a related
matter, the Commission has also been discussing the move to biennial meetings of
the Commission. It endorsed the
report of a working group on meeting frequency whose task was to propose
actions that would enable the Commission to move to biennial meetings after the
2012 Annual Meeting.
The Commission welcomed news that its website is being rebuilt to improve design
and functionality both for the Commission and for the public. The new site will
be completed before the next Annual Meeting.
There was considerable discussion of new and revised Rules of Procedure on a
number of matters in the report of the Finance and Administration Committee.
After some lengthy procedural discussions, it was agreed that further discussion
of these will occur on the morning of Day 3, in the context of a draft
Resolution on improving the effectiveness of operations within the IWC.
Tomorrow, the Commission will also discuss issues arising from the difficulties
some delegations experienced in obtaining visas in the context of the
Secretary’s report.
PRESS RELEASE - DAY 1 - 11 JULY 2011
Proceedings of the 63rd Annual Meeting of the International Whaling Commission,
held in St Helier, began today (Monday 11th July) with a speech of welcome by
Senator Alan Maclean, Economic Development Minister of the States of Jersey.
There is one new member to the Commission, Columbia, bringing the total to 89,
of which 54 were present on the first day. The full list of member countries can
be found HERE. Due to new domestic
duties and responsibilities, Ambassador Anthony Liverpool, Vice-Chair and Acting
Chair of the Commission had announced his resignation to take effect on the
opening day of the meeting. In these circumstances, the Commission was delighted
that the Commissioner for South Africa, Herman Oosthuizen, had agreed to act as
the Chair of the Meeting. Elections for Chair and Vice-Chair will take place on
the final day of the meeting as is customary practice.
After the usual introductory items, including an overview of
available documents,
the meeting adopted its Agenda.
The first major item of business was consideration of the status of
whale stocks. The Commission then received the
Report of
the Scientific Committee on the status of whale stocks. The
Scientific Committee is conducting in-depth assessments of several populations
and species. The objective is to determine the present status of populations
compared to the past and estimate trends in abundance and possible causes of
those trends, with the ultimate aim of identifying if there are anthropogenic
threats to status that need to be addressed.
The first group covered was Antarctic minke whales. The
Committee is finalising its work on abundance estimation. Although this work is
not complete, it is clear that between the late 1980s and the turn of the
century, there have been significant declines in the abundance estimates in
three of the six management areas of the Antarctic. These include areas
encompassing the Weddell and Ross Seas where ice conditions are complex and
highly variable. The next step is to determine to what extent the estimated
declines reflect changes in ice conditions affecting the surveys and to what
extent they are real declines in abundance, and to identify the causes of any
true declines.
There are seven breeding stocks of humpback whales in the Southern
Hemisphere. Over the last three few years the Committee has been
examining the breeding stock off West Africa. This was heavily reduced by
whaling, reaching a low of less than 2,000 animals in the 1960s. The good news
is that it now recovering and now numbers almost 10,000 animals and has probably
reached around half of its unexploited size. The Committee will next focus on
the breeding stocks off eastern Australia and the central south Pacific. It was
pleased this year to receive information that humpback whales off eastern
Australia are increasing at around 11% annually.
The Committee completed a circumpolar assessment of blue whales in the
Southern Hemisphere in 2008 (it is only about 1% of its unexploited
size but thankfully is recovering at around 6.5% per annum). The Committee is
now collecting information to try and assess blue whales on a regional basis.
This year it received information on the small (<1,000) population off Isla da
Chiloé.
Special attention was paid again this year to the status of the endangered
western North Pacific gray whale, whose feeding grounds
coincide with major oil and gas operations off Sakhalin Island, Russian
Federation. The population numbers only about 130 animals. The most interesting
new information came from a satellite telemetry programme undertaken last summer
under the auspices of the IWC where the single whale tagged (called ‘Flex’) was
unexpectedly found to move across to the eastern Pacific. It is hoped the
programme will put tags on up to 12 whales this summer. Subsequently, additional
evidence has been found that some of the animals that regularly feed off
Sakhalin sometimes cross to the east. The Committee has strongly endorsed the
draft conservation plan for western North Pacific gray whales and Commission
members have agreed to work together to try to mitigate anthropogenic threats to
this endangered population. The Committee has great concern over the possible
threats to this population from oil and gas activities. It recommended that all
companies implement appropriate monitoring and mitigation plans. It also
recommended that they share data to allow co-ordinated planning of activities,
especially seismic surveys to minimise the impact on gray whales. The Committee
welcomed the efforts of Japan to reduce bycatch mortality of gray whales in its
waters. Finally, the Committee acknowledged the important work of the IUCN
Western Gray Whale Advisory
Panel and recommended continuation of the Panel beyond 2011.
With respect to Southern Hemisphere right whales, most of the
Committee’s work related to preparations for a major assessment workshop that
will take place in Argentina in September. However, the Committee was pleased to
receive information that the population surveyed along southern Australia has
been increasing at around 7% per year since 1993 and now numbers around 3,500
animals.
Ship strikes and entanglements are a threat to the endangered western
North Atlantic right whale population which numbers around 300-400
animals. Five deaths and four entanglement cases were reported off the US coast
between November 2009 and October 2010. The Committee again expressed grave
concern and recommended that anthropogenic mortality should be reduced to zero
as soon as possible.
Finally under this item, the Committee reported on its new survey programme in
the North Pacific – the IWC-POWER programme (North Pacific Whale and
Ecosystem Research). Final middle-long term planning is almost
completed and results from the first cruise conducted in 2010 are being
examined. The second cruise has just begun. The programme’s objective is to
obtain information on abundance and trends and to identify the causes of any
trends should these be detected. It is particularly important since many of the
populations in the central and eastern North Pacific there have not been
assessed for decades. The primary tools will be sighting surveys, biopsy
sampling and photo-identification. The Committee encouraged all member nations,
especially those around the Pacific to participate. It is particularly grateful
to the Government of Japan which has donated a research vessel and crew. The
international team of scientists have thus far come from Japan, the USA and the
Republic of Korea.
The Commission endorsed this part of the report of the Scientific Committee and
its recommendations on whale stocks.
The Commission then received the
Report of its Working
Group on Whale Killing Methods and associated Animal Welfare Issues. The
Working Group received reports from five governments, four involved in whaling
and one related to euthanasia of stranded animals. It also received reports from
Norway with respect to the improvements it had made on killing methods. Using
its new penthrite grenade, the mean time to death had decreased to 2 minutes
with at least 80% of animals being killed instantly. The working group also
heard details of the 2010 hunt for bowhead whales off Alaska and the
improvements being made to its hunting equipment with technical co-operation
from Norway. The Commission welcomed the reports by governments and the
improvements documented.
There was considerable discussion of the report of a
non-IWC workshop
sponsored by the UK on the topic of welfare and ethics that had developed
conclusions on a number of human-whale interactions including killing and
euthanasia; use of whales in invasive research; whalewatching; and ship-strikes
and entanglements. Although all governments recognised the importance of the
issue, within the working group and the Commission itself there were both
critical and supporting comments about the quality of the report. The UK had
proposed terms of reference for an
intersessional working
group on this subject but there was no consensus within the Commission on
its contents. The UK noted that it would continue its own work on this topic.
Last year the IWC held a very successful IWC workshop on welfare issues
associated with the entanglement of large whales. This year, the
Working Group and the Commission endorsed a proposal by Australia Norway and the
USA to take forward recommendations from that workshop. The short-term
initiatives include: convening a 2nd workshop; beginning capacity building in
identified countries and regions; and establishing a standing group of experts
to advise member countries upon request. The long-term initiatives include:
assisting member countries to undertake research; promoting cooperative
research; and identifying experts and sources of further information. An IWC
voluntary fund will be established to assist with the cost of these actions. The
details can be found in
Appendix 4 of the Working Group report.
The final Item considered on Day 1 related to work on the Revised
Management Scheme (RMS). Apart from the work of the Scientific
Committee on the Revised Management Procedure, the Commission has not focused on
this item for several years, rather directing its efforts to discussions on the
Future of the IWC. In addition to some general matters relating
to technical aspects of the RMP, the Committee focussed on specific
implementations and reviews. The purpose of these is to review all of the
available information for a specific species/area combination, ensure that
scientific uncertainty is fully taken into account through simulation trials,
and, should the Commission request it, be able to determine safe catch limits.
As there is a moratorium in place on commercial whaling, the Commission does not
usually request that the final stage of calculating catch limits occurs,
although it did request such information last year in the context of the Future
of the IWC discussions. This year the Scientific Committee reported on progress
with an Implementation Review of western North Pacific common minke whales.
Given the technical complexity, the Committee informed the Commission that the
review would now be completed in 2013, rather than the originally anticipated
2012. The Committee also reported on follow-up work related to the completed
implementations of western North Pacific Bryde’s whales, North Atlantic fin
whales and North Atlantic common minke whales. In the Commission discussions,
some countries criticised the current catching of fin whales by Iceland.
SCHEDULE OF MEETINGS
Scientific Committee (Norway)
| Day |
Date |
Morning |
Afternoon |
| 1 |
Fri |
27 May |
Set-up (and pre-meetings of the Scientific
Committee on 28 and 29 May*)
|
| 2 |
Sat |
28 May |
| 3 |
Sun |
29 May |
| 4 |
Mon |
30 May |
Introductory Plenary** |
Reading |
| 5 |
Tues |
31 May |
Sub-committee
introductions |
Reading |
| 6 |
Weds |
1 June |
Sub-committee meetings |
| 7 |
Thur |
2 June |
| 8 |
Fri |
3 June |
| 9 |
Sat |
4 June |
| 10 |
Sun |
5 June |
| 11 |
Mon |
6 June |
| 12 |
Tues |
7 June |
| 13 |
Weds |
8 June |
Rest day |
| 14 |
Thur |
9 June |
Scientific Committee Plenary |
| 15 |
Fri |
10 June |
| 16 |
Sat |
11 June |
| 17 |
Sun |
12 June |
Scientific
Committee Convenors Meeting |
Commission and sub-groups (Jersey)
| Day |
Date |
Morning |
Afternoon |
| 1 |
Sun |
3 July |
Set-up |
| 2 |
Mon |
4 July |
Registration (delegates, observers) |
| 3 |
Tues |
5 July |
INF |
WKM |
BSC |
| 4 |
Weds |
6 July |
CC |
ASW |
| 5 |
Thur |
7 July |
F&A |
| 6 |
Fri |
8 July |
Report
preparation and review |
| 7 |
Sat |
9 July |
Document
translation and Plenary set-up |
| 8 |
Sun |
10 July |
Registration (delegates, observers and media) & Private
Commissioner’s Meeting |
| 9 |
Mon |
11 July |
63rd Annual Commission Meeting |
| 10 |
Tues |
12 Juy |
| 11 |
Weds |
13 July |
| 12 |
Thur |
14 July |
| 13 |
Fri |
15 July |
Equipment
dismantle (no meetings) |
*Possible pre-meetings include: AWMP gray whale
Implementation Review; Western North Pacific common minke whale
Implementation Review; Assessment of humpback whale Breeding Stock
B **Including welcome address from Norway |
| Key: |
| CC |
Conservation Committee |
| INF |
Infractions Sub-committee |
| WKM |
Working Group on Whale Killing Methods and
Associated Welfare Issues |
| ASW |
Aboriginal Whaling Sub-committee |
| BSC |
Budgetary Sub-committee (not open to GO/IGO/NGO
observers) |
| F&A |
Finance and Administration Committee (not open to
GO/IGO/NGO observers) |
|