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Tuesday, May 21, 2013
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MNN.COM › ECO-GLOSSARY

Whaling News

Whaling factory ship

Whaling

Whaling is the practice of hunting and killing whales, traditionally for meat, whale oil or baleen. Modern whaling uses electric harpoons and massive ships designed to kill and transport the animals. Many modern vessels even hold factories onboard that process whales into the desired end products.

Whaling has existed since prehistoric times; Neolithic cave paintings depict it, and archaeological evidence suggests beached whales were scavenged in the Stone Age. Basques were the earliest people to practice commercial whaling, becoming noted experts in the process. After World War I, whalers began using factory ships instead of shore stations for processing and adopted more effective hunting weaponry.

In 1946, the International Whaling Commission was established by several nations to govern the practice of whaling to save declining whale populations. Forty years later, the IWC enacted a moratorium on commercial whaling. While synthetic materials have rendered many whale products obsolete, Iceland, Japan and Norway exploit loopholes in the ban to continue operating commercial whaling industries. Collectively, they kill more than 2,000 whales annually and export whale products internationally. (Photo: wdeon/Shutterstock.com)

Articles about Whaling

  • Eco-photos of the week: June 20-26

    Fri, Jun 25 2010 at 7:39 AM

    Eco-photos of the week: June 20-26

  • Whalewatching worth billions and booming

    Fri, Jun 25 2010 at 1:43 AM

    In 2009, 13 million eco-tourists paid to see whales in their natural environment, generating $2.1 billion.

  • Whales face threats deadlier than whaling

    Thu, Jun 24 2010 at 12:27 PM

    Pollution, net entanglement, climate change and collisions with ships can be deadly to whales.

  • Japan blames anti-whaling nations for collapse of talks

    Thu, Jun 24 2010 at 3:58 AM

    Negotiations broke down Wednesday at the IWC’s annual meeting in Morocco, with pro- and anti-whaling nations unable to break a decades-long deadlock.

  • Are endangered whales still in danger?

    Wed, Jun 23 2010 at 12:30 PM

    As three nations defy a global whaling ban amid crumbling negotiations, the future of these deep-sea denizens is increasingly up in the air.

  • 10 of the most endangered whales on Earth

    Wed, Jun 23 2010 at 12:30 PM

    In 2010, world leaders debated whether to lift a ban on commercial whaling, but the talks broke down. Here's a look at 10 whales that still haven't recovered from the last assault.

  • Global whaling talks collapse

    Wed, Jun 23 2010 at 9:33 AM

    Members of the International Whaling Commission called for a year-long "cooling off" period.

  • Giant inflatable whale beaches on Rome's Spanish Steps

    Mon, Jun 21 2010 at 4:27 PM

    The whale was part of a Greenpeace stunt to protest a proposed end to the whaling moratorium at the IWC conference.

  • Whaling deal under fire from scientists, green groups

    Mon, Jun 21 2010 at 4:06 PM

    Conservationists and the IWC's scientific committee say that most of the whale catch quotas in the proposal are not sustainable.

  • Nations divided over lifting ban on commercial whale hunt

    Mon, Jun 21 2010 at 10:05 AM

    A compromise that would suspend the whaling ban has been proposed, but it's an unhappy option for nations that abhor whaling.

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