Freakonomics Radio - 550. Why Do People Still Hunt Whales?
Episode Date: July 20, 2023For years, whale oil was used as lighting fuel, industrial lubricant, and the main ingredient in (yum!) margarine. Whale meat was also on a few menus. But today, demand for whale products is at a hist...oric low. And yet some countries still have a whaling industry. We find out why. (Part 2 of “Everything You Never Knew About Whaling.”)
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I've never eaten whale, as far as I know. Have you?
Yes, I'm afraid if I dare to say that on American radio, but yes, I have.
Bjorn Basberg is an economic historian at the Norwegian School of Economics in Bergen.
Bergen is the second largest city in Norway.
A hundred years ago or more, it was the capital of Norway,
and the people in Bergen, they tend to think that they are still the capital.
Basberg recently retired from his teaching position.
Actually, in Norway, it's mandatory, so I turned 70.
That's a mandatory age of retirement.
You have more time for whaling expeditions, at least?
Not whaling expeditions, but maybe expeditions.
I go to Antarctica once in a while to at least study the whaling heritage there.
I've been actually for 30 years now involved with industrial archaeology projects in Antarctica,
especially the sub-Antarctic island of South Georgia that was for many years the center of Antarctic whaling.
So Basberg's primary activity around whaling is research,
but as we heard, he has also eaten his share.
It tastes quite good if you put it on the barbecue, on the grill.
It's like a beef, so it's tasty.
And you can also eat it in thin slices, raw as carpaccio.
Sort of carpaccio, yes.
When we as kids had whale meat served by our mothers, we didn't like it very much.
It had sort of a cod liver oil taste.
It depends very much how you treat it.
If you go to Japan, I remember I saw a book of recipes for whale in Japan,
and there were several hundred recipes,
and they are using every bits and pieces of the whale
in a very different way than we are used to here in Norway.
Although whale hunting has happened for centuries
in just about every place near an ocean,
today there are just three countries
where commercial whaling is still practiced.
Norway, Japan, and Iceland.
But it's no longer a big business.
Norway today has only about a dozen whaling ships,
which take in some 500 whales a year.
In our previous episode,
we learned how big the whaling industry used to be,
especially in 19th century America.
This was early capitalism unleashed on the high seas.
It was an extremely lucrative and important industry.
But by the late 19th century, the American whaling industry collapsed.
Whale oil had lit the world for decades, but it was being replaced by fossil fuels and eventually electricity.
As for the meat, well, Americans never took to whale meat.
But the biggest driver of the U.S. whaling collapse was the dynamism of the American economy.
There were too many new jobs that paid better and were safer than working on a whale boat.
But when America faded from the scene, commercial whaling didn't end.
In fact, it got bigger and bigger well into the 20th century.
The jobs just went elsewhere.
In terms of the national economy, it was substantial for the Norwegian economy for some years.
Today on Freakonomics Radio, we continue our series, Everything You Never Knew About Whaling.
First, we find out what it was that made tiny Norway a world leader.
The thing about these whales, they tend to sink quickly.
We'll hear why most countries abandoned whaling and why the outliers didn't.
They just saw this as another swing against them in a long string of them from the West.
And we'll hear from the whales themselves.
They were actually singing songs.
Seriously, songs.
This is Freakonomics Radio,
the podcast that explores the hidden side of everything, with your host, Stephen Dubner.
The International Whaling Commission, or IWC, is a volunteer body responsible for the management of whaling and conservation of whales.
That mission essentially translates into a global moratorium on commercial whaling. Norway, Japan,
and Iceland don't abide by this moratorium. Whales are also still hunted by indigenous groups in the
U.S., Canada, Russia, Greenland, Indonesia, St. Vincent and the
Grenadines, and Denmark. In those places, whale products typically aren't sold on the open market,
and the IWC considers indigenous hunting a sustainable practice. Among commercial whalers,
Norway remains the largest, and they too say their whale hunting is sustainable. The fact is, there isn't much demand for their whale meat in Norway or elsewhere.
And what about the ethics?
Here again is Bjorn Basberg.
I've decided never to take any strong position on this at all.
My perspective on the whaling industry is to try to understand the history
and to explain it historically. Norway did abide by the International Whaling Commission's moratorium on whaling until 1992,
but then left or chose to no longer honor that agreement.
What can you tell us about that?
Well, that was obviously very controversial internationally, and the protests were huge.
I think the Norwegian Ministry of
Foreign Affairs had a very difficult time in sort of defending the Norwegian position.
There were huge campaigns, of course, in your country, especially, but also all over the world.
But the government's view at the time was that this was an industry with a history,
it's sustainable, and it was almost compared with indigenous whaling
in Greenland, in Alaska, you know, which is still going on.
Since there's not much demand for whale meat or whale oil, why is there still any whaling in
Norway? I've read one reason may be that whales eat a lot of herring and Norwegians also eat a
lot of herring and Norway wants to keep the herring supply high by limiting the whale predators.
Is that true?
It could be an argument, but I've never really heard that, and I don't think that's a well-justified argument.
I think the main justification in Norway is that it's still an interest in those communities to keep on with the industry,
and the government has said that it's fine.
Basberg himself comes from one of these communities, a small coastal city called Sandefjord.
The city's coat of arms shows a lone whaler standing on the prow of a ship,
a harpoon raised in his arms.
That was, in a way, the New Bedford of Norway, the whaling capital there.
New Bedford, Massachusetts, was at one time the capital of America's whaling industry.
And accordingly, it was the richest city per capita in the U.S.
As for Sandafjord and Bjorn Basberg.
I grew up in the 1960s and the industry was in decline. And it was never an alternative for me to become a whaler.
But I studied at the business
school and I developed an interest for economic history. And what is it about whaling as an
industry that particularly appeals to an economist? Well, as any industry, there are all sorts of
interesting questions, of course, but I guess my interest was, although I'm an economist,
it was the technology, I think. Pardon my ignorance, but when I think of whaling,
I know probably about as much as the average person knows about whaling,
which is to say very, very, very little.
And I wouldn't necessarily think of whaling and technology going together.
Plainly, I am wrong.
American whaling, of course, that was rather primitive in terms of technology.
With a whaling ship out there on the ocean,
and then the rowing boats and
the harpooner and rather simple the struggle with the whale what has been called modern whaling
my colleagues now we like to talk about it more as industrial whaling it's not so modern anymore
but at the time of course it was modern and my thesis was about whaling and patents and that in a way i have
stuck with ever since and of course patents that is about technology and inventions and innovations
this new technology was about employing steamships which had not been used in whaling the actual
catching then involved a very powerful large harpoon or cannon, one could say, with an explosive grenade that killed the whale.
So it was very, very different from the oil-style whaling.
This harpoon cannon was invented in the 1860s
by a Norwegian whaling magnate named Sven Foyn.
So exactly at the time when the Americans were abandoning whaling in the late
19th century, the Norwegians were taking it up and establishing what we know today as the modern
whaling industry. And that is Eric Hilt, an American economic historian who also specializes
in the economics of whaling. So to do that, you needed to use very different methods and you
produced different products.
While Americans had hunted across the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans, the supply of whales there had fallen.
The Norwegians, with their powerful steamships, hunted all the way down in Antarctica.
This offered a new supply of whales that were even bigger than what the Americans hunted.
The Norwegians went after
humpback whales and the biggest mammal of all, the blue whale. The American whaling industry
couldn't touch it. If they managed to harpoon it, it would just drag them away forever. The
Americans had a name for being dragged across the ocean by a harpooned whale. They called it a
Nantucket sleigh ride. It could drag the whole whaling ship.
The other thing about these whales is that they tend to sink quickly.
The Americans would kill a sperm whale and sort of tow it back to the vessel.
You couldn't do that very easily with this gigantic blue whale.
So you not only need a cannon, but you need some kind of powerful device to actually bring the whale carcass up.
Well, they had a sort of a hose.
You just stick it in the whale?
They stuck it into the whale, yes, basically.
And then there's some kind of pump on the whaling ship that pumps air through the hose into the whale.
So it's like blowing up a balloon, essentially.
Very much so.
The Norwegian whaling industry kept innovating.
By the early 20th century, they built huge whaling ships that Basberg calls floating factories. These were accompanied by 10 or 12 smaller ships that were deployed to kill whales
and haul them back to the big ship to process the whale oil.
The factory ships was like an average oil tanker at the time, 15,000 tons, 20,000 tons.
Now, technology usually travels quickly, especially in a competitive industry where there's money to be made.
Why did the U.S. whaling industry and maybe other industries not adopt these new Norwegian technologies?
Well, first, other countries did adopt.
So Norway was not alone in the 20th century, but Norway was for many years the largest nation, but Britain was a competitor and a business partner also. And eventually, Japan developed this industry post-World War II. Germany was large in the interwar years, the Soviet Union. But the Americans never really developed an interest, I should say,
for the industry. The American whaling entrepreneurs, they just diverted their
interest into other industries. And that had to do with the more macro trends in the development
of the American economy. Here's another way to put it. America was getting too rich to bother with whaling, especially the big investors and entrepreneurs.
By the late 19th century, there was more money to be made in coal and petroleum and steel, in railroads and real estate, in media and telecommunications.
So the U.S. was moving forward fast in all those industries.
And how about Norway?
Not so much.
Norway did eventually discover its own big oil reserves,
and that's why Norway is rich today.
But that wasn't until the 1960s.
If you look back to the 1860s,
Norway is a very poor country with low wages.
It had a low standard of living,
and the availability of inexpensive oil and also meat was very attractive to them.
And so it was that Norway's whaling fleet became the largest in the world.
Whaling was an opportunity for when the alternative was unemployment, really.
In terms of the national economy, it was substantial for some years.
They earned foreign exchange because most of the products were sold abroad.
Some years, the revenues from whaling was larger than from the fisheries.
You have any idea what share of GDP the whaling industry may have represented at its peak?
As an economist, I should give you a very precise figure, but between 5% and 10%, I think never more than that.
But that is substantial for one particular industry. The product was always about oil.
Whale oil, as we heard in our previous episode, had been used for decades as a lighting fuel
and as industrial lubricant. By the 20th century, demand was falling since there were other cheaper
products on the market. But the whaling industry found other uses for its oil.
The main buyers of the whale oil throughout the 20th century was large companies in Europe like Unilever and in the United States like Procter & Gamble that processed the oil further and sold it to, well, margarine industry. That's right. Whale oil was a main ingredient in everyone's favorite 20th century butter
substitute, margarine.
So that was really the main product. Whale meat was never really a product as such. That
was always very marginal.
Okay, so the flesh of the whale was simply more valuable for its oil value than its meat
value. Oh meat value.
Oh, definitely.
But soon enough, whale meat did become more valuable, at least in some places.
And all it took was a world war.
So after World War II, Japan is not in good shape.
So off to Japan we go right after this break.
I'm Stephen Dubner, and you are listening to Freakonomics Radio.
When Japan surrendered to the Allies in 1945, putting an end to World War II, American forces under General Douglas MacArthur occupied Japan and
took the lead in rehabilitating the nation.
Japan is not in good shape, obviously. People are starving, literally.
That's Jay Alabaster, an American journalist and doctoral candidate who lives in Japan.
It was a first world country that has just been smashed because of the war. So they are
very hard up for food and protein sources, and they don't have a long history of eating meat. So MacArthur ordered the Japanese to go all in on whale hunting.
There was at least a little bit of self-interest here.
Whale hunt will help alleviate Japan's food shortage and ultimately save over $20 billion
for American taxpayers. It's not an exaggeration to say that whales saved the country for a few
years just to actually feed the hungry nation that was recovering.
And at that time, it was also served in school lunches.
But there was a problem.
Just as whale meat became a critical component of Japan's recovery, the world was running out of whales.
Whale numbers were down to 100th, 1000th of what they were at the peak. All the technology that had gone into whaling, all that mechanization
and industrialization, it had decimated the global whaling population. During the 20th century alone,
an estimated 3 million whales were killed, led by Norway, Japan, the Soviet Union, and Britain.
But plainly, that couldn't continue. And this is what led in 1946 to the establishment of the International Whaling Commission.
Fifteen of the biggest whaling countries got together to regulate how many whales could be killed.
In the beginning, the IWC is for the orderly development of the whaling industry.
So it's a very pro-whaling, pro-industry organization where a group of nations get together and try to figure out how to preserve this resource.
The IWC today is an anti-whaling organization.
It advocates for a total ban on commercial whaling.
But back then, it was trying to reach a happy medium.
The problem was they didn't have any real power to tell a given country how many whales they could kill.
Instead, the IWC set a global quota. And this
had an unintended and perverse consequence. They called it the Whaling Olympics. It caused
these fleets to go out and catch as many big whales as they could as fast as possible.
The 1960s turned out to be the peak of global whaling. Some species were by now close to
extinction, including the right whale, the humpback, and the blue whale.
But then, things began to change for the whales.
If you were around way back in 1970, you might remember a record album called Songs of the Humpback Whale.
It was a pretty big hit.
I remember that National Geographic included a disc, a 45,
inside one of their editions so that people could listen to humpback whale songs.
That is Kate O'Connell.
She's a policy advisor with the Animal Welfare Institute.
That's one of the oldest conservation groups in the U.S. They were actually singing songs, and I think they've captivated the imagination of people
around the world. O'Connell says the album also shifted the public's thinking toward whales
by showing the complexities of their behavior. The rise of this pro-whale sentiment fit in nicely
with the rise of the conservation movement generally.
This was an era when the value of clean air and clean water was becoming more visible and more
important. There was also the sense that preserving whales rather than hunting them just made sense
given how the global economy had evolved. Humankind had found cheaper and easier sources for fuel and food. So why don't
we just celebrate the whale as a beautiful free animal? In 1970, the folk singer Judy Collins
recorded a traditional whale hunting song with backing vocals by the Humpbacks. Soon after, the U.S. banned commercial whaling under the Marine Mammal
Protection Act, and the new environmental group Greenpeace made its mark by launching a movement called Save the Whales.
It always has been my lifelong ambition to eradicate whaling from the planet.
That is Paul Watson, a self-described eco-warrior.
We met him in the first episode of this series.
Back in 1975, when I was with Greenpeace, we intervened against the Soviet whaling fleet in the first episode of this series. Back in 1975, when I was with Greenpeace,
we intervened against the Soviet whaling fleet in the Pacific Ocean.
Watson was on a ship that tried to stop a Soviet ship from killing a whale.
They had harpooned this large bull whale, and he turned, he swam right underneath us and threw
himself up at the bow of the Soviet vessel. And they were waiting for him and pulled the trigger, sent an explosive harpoon into his
head.
And the whale fell back into the water, rolling in agony on the surface.
There was blood everywhere.
And I caught his eye.
And suddenly he dove and he came straight towards us.
He came up and out of the water at an angle so that the next move is to fall down and
crush us.
And as his head rose up out of the water and I looked into his eye, which is right there so close I could see my reflection of myself in that eye, as he rose up out of the water,
I felt that the whale understood what we were trying to do because I could see the effort he
made to pull himself back and he began to sink back into the sea. His eye disappeared beneath
the surface and he died. He could have killed us and chose not to do so.
Whether the whale actually chose to not kill Paul Watson
isn't something that we can fact check.
Anyway.
But it also got me to thinking, why?
Why were we killing those whales?
The Soviets were killing sperm whales for spermaceti oil and sperm oil.
They're not edible.
And the primary use for that was in the construction
and maintenance of intercontinental ballistic missiles.
This is something we can fact check. It is true that the Soviets used sperm whale oil for military
purposes, but they also killed lots of other kinds of whales, mostly to comply with the directives of
their centrally planned economy. There wasn't much demand for whale oil or meat in the Soviet Union.
But you can see why an activist like Paul Watson
might find it attractive to combine whale saving
with military disarmament.
And I said to myself,
here we are destroying these incredibly beautiful,
intelligent, self-aware, sentient beings
for the purpose of making a weapon
meant for the mass extermination of human beings.
And that's when it just struck me, we're insane.
So I said to myself from then on in,
I'm going to do this for them, not for us, but for them.
News of Paul Watson's encounter with the Soviet ship helped drive the Save the Whales movement.
But Watson's confrontational tactics weren't well received within Greenpeace,
and he was ousted by their board. He continues to use similar tactics today under the
name of the Captain Paul Watson Foundation. He says that direct action, like interfering with
whaling ships or even sinking a whaling ship, is justified by the horror of whale hunting.
Our bottom line is we don't hurt anybody. It's a strategy called aggressive nonviolence.
I'm curious to know whether you interact or have interacted much with whalers directly and tried to
understand their perspective. I've had many sit-down debates with whalers, ex-whalers in
Australia, whalers in Norway, many at the International Whaling Commission. Not with the Japanese, they just refuse.
We tried ourselves for months to sit down with whalers to hear their perspective.
Apparently, the few remaining commercial whalers are so used to seeing their industry portrayed as barbaric that they avoid speaking publicly. We did finally hear from one Norwegian whaler
who may be willing to speak with us,
but that came too late for this episode.
If that interview does happen, we'll let you know.
In the meantime, we will get back to Jay Alabaster
to hear how he gained the trust of Japanese whalers.
I had to give this speech in front of them,
and they debated and debated.
That's coming up after a quick break.
I'm Stephen Dubner.
This is Freakonomics Radio.
If you're enjoying this series on whaling,
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We will be right back. In 2009, the world was shocked to see the Japanese whaling industry on the big screen.
Right now I'm focusing on that one little body of water where that slaughter takes place.
It was a documentary film called The Cove.
If we can't stop that, if we can't fix that,
forget about the bigger issues. The film was about dolphin hunting in the town of Taiji.
In case you've forgotten your middle school biology, yes, dolphins are whales. They,
along with porpoises and a variety of bigger animals that we call whales all belong to the cetacean infertile order.
Anyway, the film follows Rick O'Berry, a dolphin trainer turned anti-whaling activist,
critiquing the practice of whale hunting in Japan.
Back in the States, the Cove was nominated for an Academy Award.
Jay Alabaster, the American journalist we met earlier, was living in Tokyo. The Associated
Press sent him to Taiji. Someone had to be in the town in case at once. So I went to the town
to cover and talk to people and just get their reaction. Taiji is one of the few locations where
whaling has basically gone on uninterrupted for several centuries. It was a really remote little
town. When I got there, no one would talk to me. So I was walking around this town, which is amazingly beautiful and remote and quaint, and people were incredibly nice. No
one was rude to me or threatening or anything, but no one would answer any of my questions or
anything. Taiji did not like the attention the film had brought. They had already gone through
the protests of Greenpeace and the anti-whaling movement. They just saw this as another
anti-whaling swing against them in a long string of them from the West.
In order to speak to the fishermen and the community members, I had to kind of involve
myself in the society. There's 12 of them that kind of run the boats, and it's a union, so they
all have equal power, so they all have to agree. So I had to give this speech in front of them,
you know, tell them why I wanted to do this and what I hoped to accomplish. And they debated and
debated, and finally I was allowed to hang out with do this and what I hoped to accomplish. And they debated and debated.
And finally, I was allowed to hang out with them before and after they went on the hunts.
In Taiji, whaling is done using a method called drive hunting.
As long as the weather is acceptable and they don't have something else going on, they'll go out every single morning.
There's 12 boats, if they're all operating, and they kind of spread out in a fan with Taiji at its center.
And they go out about 15 miles at a relatively slow speed.
And they're just scanning, scanning, scanning the horizon,
looking for birds or spouts,
anything to give them a hint that there's one of the species
that they're allowed to catch.
And if one of them finds a species,
he'll call it in on the radio
and the 12 will have like an impromptu conference
on their wireless radios.
And if they decide to go for it,
they'll all assemble behind the pod
and they'll line up the boats. And then they have these metal poles that are kind of flanged at the bottom,
and they'll put the flange side into the water. And they're very long, they're very coordinated.
They'll just push the pod slowly, slowly, slowly towards Taiji. And then they get them to
a certain cove, you know, the cove, and seal it off with ropes, and then either take the
animals for meat or live for show animals.
That's one thing that's unique on Taiji is that because they do this method of hunting,
the animals aren't killed at sea. Alabaster tried to learn about the economics of whaling in Taiji.
The prices are quite hidden. They're not published anywhere. So it's quite difficult to get
a hard read. But it's very clear that the live animals are worth
far more than the animals that they sell for meat. They only actually eat two commonly,
the short-finned pilot whale and the striped dolphin are the two that are celebrated. And
one of those animals will go for between $500 and $1,000, I think, for meat. But another animal,
say a bottlenose dolphin, which is the show animal that you often see in aquariums, kind of the
flipper, you know, they can go for $10,000, $20,000. So there's a huge difference
there. The film about Taiji whaling condemns both the killing of whales for meat and selling them
to a dolphinarium. When I started out, there were only three dolphinariums.
Today, it's become a multi-billion dollar industry.
And all of these captures,
you help create the largest slaughter of dolphins on the planet.
And the winner is...
The Cove won the Oscar for Best Documentary.
Taiji and Japan more generally were almost universally chastised for allowing whaling to continue.
Jay Alabaster, having seen things from the inside, felt there was a bigger story to be told.
So he decided to get a PhD in journalism
and mass communications. He is currently writing his dissertation. Yeah, so that's kind of how the
domestic and the international media cover this little town of Taiji, the debate that swirls
around it and the history of the town itself. Since the beginning of the anti-whaling movement,
Japan has often been the primary target, much more so for some
reason than Norway or Iceland. When the International Whaling Commission declared
an outright ban on commercial whaling in 1982, Japan objected and allowed its whaling industry
to continue, supposedly for research purposes. In 2019, Japan left the IWC and resumed commercial whaling.
This prompted Boris Johnson, soon to be Prime Minister of the UK, to publish an opinion piece
with the headline, Why is there not more outrage about Japan's barbaric practice of whaling?
Japan's Chief Cabinet Secretary at the time, Yoshihide Suga, defended the decision.
Engagement in whaling, he said, has been supporting local communities. In its long history,
Japan has used whales not only as a source of protein, but also for a variety of other purposes.
These included fertilizer and insect repellent, musical instruments, and board game pieces.
But Jay Alabaster has seen how weak Japan's defensive arguments can seem
in the face of anti-whaling activism.
There are these powerful environmental groups, and when I say powerful, I don't mean in a negative
way. They're just powerful, and they apply the pressure to kind of tweak the world in the way
that they want, and they're often very successful.
And a little town like Taiji, which has 3,000 people and no international presence,
there's no one there that really does social media officially.
In looking historically, those towns don't tend to do so well
when the kind of pressure that is applied in Taiji has applied to them.
But Taiji was very robust, held up, received incredible domestic assistance.
I think for Japan, it comes down to
the fact that they've always been very concerned that if there's a successful end to whaling,
what does that then mean for other parts of their fisheries industry? That, again, is Kate O'Connell
from the Animal Welfare Institute. And in particular, tuna. They're very focused
on their tuna industries. And so they're very nervous that, you know, will they then come after
our tuna? There's one big difference to point out. Global demand for tuna is strong. For whale meat,
not so much. All the fishermen in Taiji talk about this time in the 80s and 90s when the
prices were incredibly high. And in one season, they would make enough to buy a house. Jay Alabaster
says that whale meat now gets maybe one third or even less the price it used to sell for.
That's good news if you eat whale meat. Whale is served across Japan and has regional varieties.
One common one is called tatsutage. It's like fried whale, which is the easiest to eat. Whale is served across Japan and has regional varieties. One common one is called
tatsutage. It's like fried whale, which is the easiest to eat. Whale has a certain flavor to it,
and if you're not used to it, it's not good. I have trouble with it as well. So it's kind of
seasoned to disguise that. The raw whale, although this just sounds, from a Western perspective,
it just sounds awful. But Japan has a long history, obviously, of eating raw fish, and they
eat whale that's been freshly caught, lightly cooked or not cooked at all.
And if you're a meat eater like I am, it is incredible meat when it's still fresh.
But, Alabaster says, the overall amount of whale meat consumed, even in Japan, is very small.
So the average person eats, it doesn't even register on the decimal,
that 0.00% of their diet is whale.
I don't know what would be an equivalent in the US, but maybe if you saw rabbit on the menu
or something like that, you'd be like, oh, that's interesting. Or crawdad or something like that.
You know, you wouldn't be floored, but you'd be like, oh, that's kind of interesting. They have
crawdad. But here's the thing. In Japan, even if you don't eat whale, you may not want whale hunting
to end. Polls have shown that most people, I think 60 or 70 percent of people, support whaling,
or Japan's right to whale, even if they don't eat whale themselves. In broader Japan, there is no question that the outside pressure has given a huge boost to whaling. It's one of the few issues
I've seen in Japan where, across the political spectrum, there's support for whaling.
The Japanese can always say, well, this is our tradition. And that, again, is the longtime anti-whaling activist Paul Watson.
When a species becomes endangered, like the bowhead, there can be no justification for any tradition, any culture.
My personal position is I'm opposed to the killing of any whale by anyone, anywhere, for any reason.
Do you feel that the war against whaling has been won, essentially?
No, but we certainly have had an impact. A number of countries that were whaling when I began are
no longer doing it, like Spain and Australia and Chile. But Japan, Norway, and Iceland have just
bluntly ignored that. Before I came to Taiji, I had this impression that it was just one of these topics that gets dragged out of the closet every once in a while to hold up, you know, this is our culture.
But when you come to these little communities, it's very clear that, you know, it's a small section of Japan, but there is definitely a living, thriving, wailing culture.
I believe, you know, that this is a sustainable practice.
The arguments against it are much more moral than economic or environmental, I would say.
Back in Norway, the whaling economist Bjorn Basberg agrees that moral arguments are driving
the whaling debate these days. But as we all know, there's no universal scale of morality. In Norway, I think the typical attitude would be that we are eating and slaughtering all sorts of animals.
And the whales are no more than an animal.
It's a large one, of course, but it's not more special than other animals.
That said, the era of big whaling is plainly over, at least for now.
My feeling is that the industry is struggling in many ways.
They are struggling to find a market.
It's not a huge demand for whale meat in Norway.
We do export some whale meat to Japan.
We are allowed to do that, but that's also fairly limited.
The quota for the last few years has been around 1,000 whales that could be killed,
and the kill has only been like 500.
And that is not because there are not enough whales out there, but there are not enough whalers.
So, are we about to enter a post-whaling world?
And what if I told you that humans are still killing hundreds of thousands of whales a
year, but not by hunting them? We've had all these whales washing up on shores or being found
floating dead. Coming up next time on the show, how dangerous to whales are offshore wind farms?
How about noise pollution and fishing nets? Also, why is it still a good idea to read
Moby Dick? There's a headline early in the novel that says bloody battle in Afghanistan, grand
contested election for the presidency of the United States. And was a 19th century whaling crew
more ethnically diverse than your 21st century office? All that in the third and final episode of Everything You Never Knew About Whaling.
That's next time on the show.
Until then, take care of yourself.
And if you can, someone else too.
Freakonomics Radio is produced by Stitcher and Renbud Radio.
You can find our entire archive on any podcast app or at Freakonomics Radio is produced by Stitcher and Renbud Radio. You can find our entire archive on any podcast app or at Freakonomics.com, where we also publish transcripts and show notes.
This episode was produced by Zach Lipinski and mixed by Greg Rippin with help from Jeremy Johnston. Eleanor Osborne, Elsa Hernandez, Emma Terrell, Gabriel Roth, Jasmine Klinger, Julie Canfor,
Catherine Moncure, Lyric Bauditch, Morgan Levy, Neil Carruth, Rebecca Lee Douglas,
Ryan Kelly, and Sarah Lilly. Our theme song is Mr. Fortune by the Hitchhikers.
The rest of our music is composed by Luis Guerra. As always, thank you for listening.
I don't think of Norway as having an east coast, but I'm bad at geography.
Well, the eastern part of Norway is mostly Sweden, but we have a small southeast coast.
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