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National Oceanic And Atmospheric Administration- NOAA: U.S. Winter and February Cooler Than AverageNOAA’s State of the Climate report for the winter season (December through February) and the month of February, state that temperatures were below normal for the contiguous United States. The winter season was wetter than normal; however precipitation in February alone was slightly below average. […]
- NOAA’s Fisheries Service and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Propose ESA Listing Changes for the Loggerhead Sea TurtleNOAA’s Fisheries Service and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (FWS), jointly referred to as the Services, announced today their joint determination that the loggerhead sea turtle (Caretta caretta) is globally comprised of nine distinct population segments (DPSs) that qualify as “species” for listing as endangered or threatened under the Endangered Sp […]
- Hurricane Forecasters Bring Preparedness Message to Atlantic, Mexico and CaribbeanNOAA and the U.S. Air Force Reserve will host a series of public events from March 18 to 27 in six coastal communities in Bermuda, Mexico and the Caribbean to urge residents to prepare for the upcoming hurricane season. […]
- NOAA: U.S. Winter and February Cooler Than Average
Sea Shephard Ocean Protection- Antarctic Campaign Report – Success Defending Whales!Antarctic Campaign Report – Success Defending Whales! Ships are expendable, endangered whales species are not 2009-2010 Antarctic Whale Defense Campaign: Operation Waltzing Matilda After three long weary and dramatic months upon the most remote and hostile seas in the world, the Sea Shepherd ships Steve Irwin and Bob Barker were welcomed by crowds of cheer […]
- Japanese Whalers Are Clear Cutting the “Forests” of the Southern OceanJapanese Whalers Are Clear Cutting the “Forests” of the Southern Ocean Intelligence willfully destroyed to read booksMoby Dick read by the light of burning whales,Without a thought, blind to the connectionsBy death’s bright light, is read another bookThou shalt not kill is one of the lying tales.We define what is right by biased selections- Captain P […]
- Sea Shepherd Ships Complete Operations in Southern Ocean for 2010Sea Shepherd Ships Complete Operations in Southern Ocean for 2010 1800 Hours: Perth and Fremantle100 Hours: Sydney and Hobart0200 Hours: (PST) Friday Harbor and Los Angeles Captain Paul Watson has ordered the Sea Shepherd ship Bob Barker to disengage from further pursuit of the Japanese factory ship Nisshin Maru and to set a course for Hobart, Tasmania. “T […]
- Antarctic Campaign Report – Success Defending Whales!
Environmental Protection Agency- Science Wednesday: Sustainability Is Our True NorthEach week we write about the science behind environmental protection. Previous Science Wednesdays. A week ago at the Keck Center of the National Academies, I heard Paul Anastas, EPA’s Assistant Administrator for the Office of Research and Development, speak about sustainability. He said, “sustainability is our true north.” That started my thinking ab […]
- Discussing the DiscussionMy job provides a lot of opportunities to meet with people face-to-face. I’ve met with environmental justice advocates in New Orleans, mayors affected by auto sector closures in the Midwest, and tribal representatives in Montana, just to name a few. It’s all part of Administrator Jackson’s directive to expand the conversation on environmentalism. But n […]
- CHILDHOOD OBESITY PART I: Healthy DietsFor the past two years I have been volunteering at a local elementary school in my hometown. Only recently did I have a chance to see the cafeteria. Scanning the trays I saw the “typical” cafeteria foods : pizza, hotdogs, and hamburgers. Rarely did I see fruits and vegetables, but I always saw some sort [...] […]
- Science Wednesday: Sustainability Is Our True North
Environment- Reduce U.S. Consumption of PetroleumThe price of oil is currently hovering near $80 per barrel, but that doesn’t include the potential economic costs to the United States that would be caused by disruptions in oil supply, according to a recent discussion paper by Resources for the Future (RFF), an independent research group. That report estimated the oil security premium [...] […]
- Reduce U.S. Consumption of Petroleum
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Activist ship hits Japanese whaling vessel
Japanese whalers claim activists threw rancid butter at the whaling fleet.
A group of radical anti-whaling activists said they were pelted with bloody chunks of whale meat and blubber.
Sounds like an ugly dinner party?
SYDNEY (AFP) – Ships carrying militant environmental activists and Japanese whalers collided during a high seas clash in Antarctic waters Friday, with each side blaming the other.
The Sea Shepherd Conservation Society said it had no choice but to hit the Yushin Maru No.2 after the Japanese whaling vessel made a sudden attempt to block the path of activist ship the Steve Irwin.
“We’ve been in pretty intense confrontations with them for the past few days,” Paul Watson, captain of the Steve Irwin, told AFP.
“We were in the process of blocking the transfer (of a dead whale) from the Yushin Maru No.2 when the Yushin Maru No.1 moved directly in front of the bow to block us,” he said.
“I could not turn to starboard without hitting the Yushin Maru No.1. I tried to back down but the movement of the Yushin Maru No.2 made the collision unavoidable.”
But Tokyo’s government-backed Institute of Cetacean Research (ICR) blamed Sea Shepherd for the collision, saying its vessel “came forward and rammed the Yushin Maru No. 2 in the stern.”
“While no one was injured, the circumstances could have been much worse, even fatal,” ICR head Minoru Morimoto said.
Toshinori Uoya, a Fisheries Agency official, disputed Sea Shepherd’s account and said it was impossible for the Japanese ships to make sudden movements to produce a collision.
“If they keep tailing us, it’s no surprise that there would be a collision,” Uoya told AFP.
“This is a very dangerous activity and our country is doing legitimate research based on the rules of the IWC (International Whaling Commission),” he said.
Sea Shepherd activity “is illegal and it puts in danger the lives of the crew members and damages our property. It is unforgivable,” he said.
The militant conservationists have been harassing the whalers on their annual hunts in the Antarctic for the past five years, but Watson said he had “never seen them (the Japanese whalers) this aggressive.”
“They are obviously frustrated at the money they are losing and they have been ordered to do whatever needs to be done in order to prevent us from preventing them killing whales.”
Earlier this week the group said two activists had been injured when they were blasted with high-pressure hoses and pelted with metal balls.
In turn, the militant environmental group has been accused by Japan of “eco-terrorism” for its attempts to disrupt the annual hunt.
An international moratorium on commercial whaling was imposed in 1986 but Japan kills hundreds each year using a loophole that allows “lethal research” on the ocean giants.
Japan makes no secret that the meat ends up on dinner tables, and accuses Western nations of not respecting its culture.