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Captain Paul Watson



Last Updated: 11/21/2009

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Age: 58
Sign: Sagittarius

City: Steve Irwin
State: Australian Territory
Country: AQ
Signup Date: 3/6/2007

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Sunday, November 22, 2009 

Category: News and Politics
Note from Captain Paul Watson: For years I have written and lectured on the importance of protecting biodiversity. The diminishment of diversity in the biosphere is just as much a threat as global warming and climate change but for the most part is ignored and given very little publicity. This story in the Guardian illustrates my concern quite well: 


http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/2009/nov/20/biodiversity-loss-darwin-edward-wilson
*
Biodiversity loss is Earth's 'immense and hidden' tragedy, Darwin's 'natural heir' warns**

Problem of biodiversity loss has been 'eased off centre stage' by focus on climate change, according to Prof Edward Wilson, the ecologist described as 'Darwin's natural heir'*

By James Randerson

The diversity of life on Earth is undergoing an "immense and hidden" tragedy that requires the scale of global response now being deployed to tackle climate change, according to one of the world's most eminent biologists.

Prof Edward Wilson, an ecologist who has been described as "Darwin's natural heir" and hailed by novelist Ian McEwan as an "intellectual hero" and "inspirational" writer, told the Guardian that the threat was so grave he is pushing for the creation of an international body of experts modelled on the UN's Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC).

The IPCC, which is credited with convincing world leaders that the threat from climate change is real, includes about 2,500 scientific expert reviewers from more than 130 countries and was awarded the Nobel peace prize in 2007 along with Al Gore. Wilson's proposed organisation - which he names the Barometer of Life - would report to governments on the threats posed to species around the world.

Wilson said the problem of biodiversity loss had been "eased off centre stage" because of the focus on climate change.

"We don't hear as much public concern, protestation and plans by political leaders to save the living environment. It doesn't get anything like the attention the physical environment has," he said.

Since the beginning of the last century, 183 species are known to have become extinct, including the Tasmanian tiger, the Caribbean monk seal and the toolache wallaby. But this number is a gross underestimate of the true number of extinctions, according to the International Union for Conservation of Nature species programme.

Wilson was speaking ahead of the 150th anniversary of the publication of the Origin of Species on Tuesday. The 80-year-old scientist will deliver a lecture via video link to an audience at London's Royal Institution on Darwin's legacy and "the future of biology".

The extent of scientific ignorance about the diversity of life on Earth is vast. Scientists have catalogued about 1.9 m species, but estimate there are about 20m-30m in total (excluding microbes).

Wilson said the scale of the mass extinction now under way was even harder to comprehend.

At the start of the Neolithic period - about 9500BC - scientists estimate that species were becoming extinct at a rate of 20-30 per year. Since the population explosion of modern humans, that is estimated to have increased to 20,000-30,000. Most have never been documented by scientists. And in a couple of decades, Wilson reckons this will have increased to 200,000-300,000. Wilson's proposed international initiative, which he has developed with Simon Stuart, the chairman of the Species Survival Commission, would document this species loss and work out how to tackle it.

"Darwin would be simply appalled by what humanity had done to the richness and diversity of natural life," said Randal Keynes, one of Darwin's great-great-grandsons, who is helping to coordinate the 150th anniversary with the British Council. "He would be in the lead of campaigning on the preservation of biodiversity."

Some of the species that played a central role in the formulation of Darwin's theoryof evolution by natural selection are now either extinct or severely threatened. The Floreana mockingbird, that lives on the island of the same name in the Galapagos, was one of a handful of related species that first gave Darwin the idea that species could change (it is a myth that finches were the crucial group).

Reflecting on the similarities and differences between mockingbirds on different islands and on the mainland, Darwin gave the first vague hint of his later theory in his notes on the Beagle voyage that "such facts would undermine the stability of species".

Today, the Floreana mockingbird is classed as "critically endangered" and exists in two populations numbering 200 and 49. The giant tortoise that Darwin encountered on the same island - Geochelone elephantopus - was driven extinct by hungry whalers who enjoyed eating its meat in soup.

Wilson said conservation efforts around the world were far from adequate.
"Right now we are just piddling around with efforts here and there, some of them strong and dedicated, the aggregate of which is not even close to what we need.""The benefits for humanity [of a concerted international effort on biodiversity] would be enormous ... the discovery of the rest of life on Earth and fuller evaluation of it is going to result in all sorts of very valuable knowledge," said Wilson, pointing at new crops, products and biotechnology advances.

A year of celebration of Darwin's achievements (and his 200th birthday) is drawing to a close and will segue neatly into the International Year of Biodiversity in 2010.

"The public recognition of the importance of biodiversity as an issue is very poor, very low," said Kenyes, "I think Darwin would want everyone to pick up that agenda and give it all the support they can."
Sunday, November 22, 2009 

Category: News and Politics

Das Ende des japanischen Walfangs im



 Südpolarmeer ist in Sicht

von RSS-Feed www.migaloo.de
21.11.2009 - 13:56 Uhr - Umwelt & Natur


(prcenter.de) Kommentar von Kapitän Paul Watson

Die Yakuza kontrollierte, wie gestern die japanische Walfangflotte aus Japan aufbrach und offizielle ihre 6000-Meilen-Reise in die abgelegenen Gewässer des Australischen Antarktis Territoriums aufnahm.Sie haben vor, innerhalb des Walschutzgebietes des Südpolarmeers 925 geschützte antarktische Minkwale und 50 gefährdete Finnwale abzuschlachten, unter Verletzung des weltweiten Moratoriums zum kommerziellen Walfang und unter Verletzung des Antarktisabkommens.

Diese Leute sind Wilderer. Sie sind Verbrecher und sie betreiben ein unbarmherzig grausames Gemetzel an den größten, intelligentesten und sozial komplexesten fühlenden Wesen der Meere.

Die aus acht Schiffen bestehende japanische Flotte wird an der Ostpazifikküste Asiens gen Süden steuern, entlang der Westküste Australiens an den Rand der antarktischen Eisfelder, und dort werden sie den Horror ihrer Harpunenkanonen loslassen, um die Leben von nahezu tausend Walen auszulöschen. Sie tun das mit der lächerlich irreführenden Entschuldigung, dass das Schlachten für „wissenschaftliche Forschung“ durchgeführt werde.

Walfang ist “Tradition” in Japan und sie begann zu der selben Zeit als Folter zu wissenschaftlichen Zwecken eine Tradition wurde. Sie begannen mit tödlicher, sogenannter wissenschaftlicher Forschung am Menschen kurz vor und im Laufe des zweiten Weltkrieges und 19 46 wurden mit Hilfe General McArthurs ihre Antarktis-Walfangflotten aufgerüstet um ihre Verfolgungsjagd auf Meeressäuger im Südpolarmeer aufzunehmen.

Unsere Aufgabe ist es, die Killer zu stoppen und das Leben so vieler Wale wie mögich zu retten und die Sea Shepherd Schiffe Steve Irwin und die kürzlich erworbene Ady Gil sind in Position, um am 7. Dezember von Freemantle in Westaustralien abzulegen. Die japanische Flotte und die Sea Shepherd Flotte sollten zur selben Zeit vor der Küste der Antarktis ankommen.

Sea Shepherd wird erneut ein Filmteam ins Südpolarmeer mitnehmen, diesmal um die 3. Staffel der Animal Planet Hitshow Whale Wars zu drehen.

Hoffentlich wird es die letzte Staffel der Show. Unser Vorhaben ist es, die japanische Walfangflotte ökonomisch zu versenken und ich glaube, dass dieses Jahr das beste ist, um das zu erreichen. Wir haben die einzige TV Hitshow, die ausgestrahlt wird, deren Stars sich wünschen, dass ihre Show beendet wird, weil das Ende des japanischen Walfangs auch Whale Wars beenden wird.

Die letzten drei Sea Shepherd Walschutzkampagnen in der Antarktis, Operation Leviathan (2006-2007), Operation Migaloo (2007-2008) und Operation Musashi (2008-2009) haben erfolgreich die Waltötungsquote auf die Hälfte reduziert und die Profite der Walfangflotte zunichte gemacht. Die Walfänger stecken nun tief in einer finanziellen Verschuldung und die soeben gewählte Regierung von Premierminister Jun Hoshikawa hat durchblicken lassen, dass es ihnen reicht mit den massiven Subventionen, die die Regierung an eine Industrie leistet, die Verluste macht und der japanischen Nation weltweit ein äußerst schlechtes Image verschafft.

Das langfristige Ziel von Sea Shepherd ist es, die japanischen Walfangflotte ökonomisch zu versenken. Wir sind nahe daran, die Flotte in den Ruin zu treiben und ich bin zuversichtlich, dass wir ihre Profite in diesem Jahr maßgeblich beschneiden werden, so weit, dass es uns möglich sein kann, die Stilllegung der Flotte zu erzwingen.

Das bietet außerdem der Hoshikawa Regierung einen ehrenhaften Weg, sich aus den Walfangaktivitäten im Südpolarmeer zurückzuziehen. Das Einstellen von Subventionszahlungen an eine Industrie, die fortlaufend darin versagt, einen Profit zu erwirtschaften, ist schlichtweg ein gutes Geschäft. Das von Japans neuem Premierminister Yukio Hatoyama ins Leben gerufene Komitee zur Prüfung der Staatsausgaben hat empfohlen, Spenden für die Overseas Fishery Cooperation Foundation nach 2010 einzustellen. Die OFCF ist der größte Geldgeber des in Tokio angesiedelten Institute of Cetacean Research.

Wenn die Regierungsdarlehen für den Walfang zurückgerufen werden, ist es unwahrscheinlich, dass das Institute for Cetacean Research weiterarbeiten kann. Berichte in den japanischen Medien behaupten, dass das Institut mehr als eine Billion Yen aus früheren Darlehen der OFCF nicht vollständig zurückzuzahlen fähig war. Die Sea Shepherd Conservation Society ist der Grund dafür, dass diese Darlehen nicht zurückgezahlt wurden. Unsere Interventionen waren erfolgreich, ihre Profite in den letzten drei Geschäftsjahren zunichte zu machen.

Darüber hinaus wird das Kommittee die Ausgaben des Departments für auswärtige Angelegenheiten und seine Aufwendungen für Schmiergelder an Dritte-Welt-Länder überprüfen, die diese im Gegenzug für Pro-Walfang-Stimmen bei den Treffen der Internationalen Walfangkommission erha.lten

Mit hoher Wahrscheinlichkeit werden etliche dieser japanischen Marionettenstaaten der dritten Welt nicht das Geld für einen ihrer Gastauftritte beim IWC -Treffen 2010 haben, das für den nächsten Juni in Marokko angesetzt wurde.

US-Präsident Barack Obama wird in dieser Woche Japan besuchen und die Walfangfrage ist auf der Agenda für sein Treffen mit dem Premierminister.

Der Standpunkt der Vereinigten Staaten ist oppositionell zu kommerziellem Walfang und solchem zum Zwecke todbringender wissenschaftlicher Forschung, wie in einer Stellungnahme des US -Außenministeriums zum Ausdruck gebracht wurde: „die USA verpflichten sich, den weltweiten Schutz und den Umgang mit großen Walpopulationen mithilfe wissenschaftsbasierter Politik und Führung innerhalb der Internationalen Walfangkommission (IWC) zu fördern.

“Die USA bestehen auf ihrer Sichtweise, dass das Moratorium zum kommerziellen Walfang ein notwendiges Mittel zum Schutz ist und glauben, dass tödlicher wissenschaftlicher Walfang in modernem Walschutzmanagement überflüssig ist“, sagt das Außenministerium.

Zwischenzeitlich haben 40 regierungsunabhängige Umweltschutzorganisationen, die in Lateinamerika arbeiten, gefordert, dass ihre Regierungen diplomatische Bemühungen gegen das Abschlachten der Wale „zu vorgetäuschten wissenschaftlichen Zwecken“ aufnehmen, um das Leben hunderter von Walen auf der Südhalbkugel zu retten.

Was unseren Bemühungen zusätzlich Gewicht verleiht, ist eine Petition, die Anfang der Woche an Japan überreicht wurde und unterschrieben ist von allen lateinamerikanischen Kommissaren der Internationalen Walfangkommission.

Elsa Cabrera, verantwortliche Direktorin des Cetacean Conservation Center of Chile, sagte “die enorme Unterstützung durch die regierungsunabhängigen Organisationen Lateinamerikas ist eine deutliche Botschaft an unsere Regierungen hinsichtlich der Notwendigkeit einer öffentlichen Zurückweisung der sogenannten „wissenschaftlichen Walfang“operationen, einer Tätigkeit, die nicht reguliert ist und die ohne jeden Kontrollmechanismus in Gewässern durchgeführt wird, die paradoxerweise Walschutzgebiet sind“.

In dem Schreiben stellten die regierungsunabhängigen Organisationen fest: “seit der Festsetzung des Moratoriums zum kommerziellen Walfang hat die Regierung Japans mehr als 8000 Wale im Walschutzgebiet Südpolarmeer gefangen“.

Roxanna Schteinbarg, die verantwortliche Koordinatorin des Walschutzinstituts von Argentinien, erklärte “wir sind zuversichtlich, dass unsere Regierungen unseren Anliegen Beachtung schenken werden und Schritte unternehmen werden, die die japanische Walfangflotte stoppen können“.

Die Sea Shepherd Schiffe werden unter den auf sie gerichteten Augen der Welt auf eine Konfrontation mit der japanischen Walfangflotte zusteuern. Wir stellen uns einer schwierigen Herausforderung. Die japanischen Walfänger werden versuchen, uns zu töten, und wenn sie tatsächlich jemanden von meiner Crew oder mich selbst verletzen oder töten, wird die Regierung von Japan ihre Verbrechen rechtfertigen und verteidigen.

Wir müssen andererseits eingreifen, um ihrer Waljagd Einhalt zu gebieten ohne einen Einzigen der japanischen Walfänger zu verletzen, wohl wissend, dass, egal wie gewaltlos unsere Maßnahmen sind, unsere Regierungen uns keine Hilfe leisten werden, wenn wir in Schwierigkeiten geraten und unsere Aktionen verurteilen werden, ungeachtet dessen, wie umsichtig wir mit unseren Taktiken vorgehen.

Die Greenpeace Foundation hat schon längst die Sea Shepherd Maßnahmen verurteilt und fährt fort, Spendengelder zur Rettung der Wale aufzutreiben, trotz der Tatsache, dass sie während der letzten zwei Jahre nicht in das Walschutzgebiet Südpolarmeer zurückgekehrt sind und sie auch keinerlei Pläne haben, dieses Jahr dorthin zurückzukehren.

Es war eine ausgedehnte Kampagne und diese ist die sechste Reise, die Sea Shepherd auf die Beine gestellt hat, um gegen die japanischen Walwilderer vorzugehen. Unsere Strategie war die ganze Zeit, die japanische Walfangflotte ökonomisch zu versenken – sie in den Ruin zu treiben.

Ich bin zuversichtlich, dass wir dieses Ziel erreichen werden und ich bin voller Hoffnung, dass diese die letzte Reise sein wird, die wir unternehmen müssen, um die Wale im Walschutzgebiet des Südpolarmeers zu beschützen.

Quelle: http://blog.migaloo.de/2009/11/21/das-ende-des-japanischen-walfangs-im-sudpolarmeer-ist-in-sicht/
Engl. Original: http://www.seashepherd.org/news-and-media/editorial-091119-1.html

Angaben zum Autor ( Angaben als Text-Datei downloaden):
www.migaloo.de
Thomas Buiter
Hauptstr. 20a
84405 Dorfen
Sunday, November 22, 2009 

Category: Movies, TV, Celebrities

....

It's eco-war on the high seas  ....

Fiona Morrow....
Special to The Globe and Mail ....
....

At the Edge of the World ....

  •  Show times in Vancouver are; today Saturday 6:30 PM,  Sunday 5:30 PM and 8:15 PM, and Monday November 23rd at 8:15 PM
  • Featuring Paul Watson ....
  • Directed by Dan Stone   

A lone figure climbs to the tip of an iceberg. He pauses for a moment, then jumps into the freezing water below. It's a crazy move – the first of many captured in Dan Stone's hair-raising documentary of eco-warriors in action. ....

Two ships – the Farley Mowat and the Robert Hunter – owned by the Sea Shepherd Conservation Society, head to ..Antarctica.. determined to hamper the Japanese whaling fleet. Refused legal registration in both ..Belize.. and ....Britain...., the ships set sail as pirate vessels, crewed by 46 activists prepared to risk everything in their quest to save the giant mammals. ....

Despite their own legal limbo, the activists consider themselves law enforcers: Three nations – ..Norway.., ..Iceland.. and ....Japan.... – continue to hunt whales despite a 1986 international UN ban on commercial whaling. ....

Success is not a sure thing by any means: The continent's ....Ross.. ..Sea.... is vast, full of treacherous floating ice, and prone to terrifying weather fronts. The Japanese fleet is the proverbial needle in a haystack: It is entirely possible it will not be found before the Sea Shepherd ships are forced to turn tail and head for shore. ....

The crew members pass the time on-board readying their weaponry: prepping stink bombs and fashioning lengthy coils of shredded rope designed to wrap around and disable the Japanese ships' propellers. In between, there is time for explosive bouts of seasickness and wide-eyed wonder at the immense natural beauty that surrounds them. ....

With an impressive seven-camera crew and access to Sea Shepherd's scouting helicopter, Stone presents the 50-day mission as a battle of life and death – and not just for the whales. That this is a serious business is driven home when one of the two-man Zodiacs goes missing while harassing a Japanese boat. The tension – as animosity is put temporarily aside and the Japanese help in the search – is excruciating. ....

Winner of the audience-voted Best Environmental Film award in this year's Vancouver International Film Festival, the city is a fitting venue for the film's theatrical first run. Founder of Sea Shepherd and skipper of the Farley Mowat, Canadian Paul Watson was also a founding member of the Vancouver-born Greenpeace. ....

Watson split from Greenpeace when the group turned away from direct action, deciding to take such matters into his own hands. Ironically, during this filmed expedition, both organizations are at sea tracking the Japanese, but while Sea Shepherd shares its discoveries and co-ordinates with Greenpeace, the courtesy is never returned. It's a depressing state of affairs between two groups fighting for the same outcome. ....

Nevertheless, Stone is smart not to turn this into a personality piece. Indeed, Watson is most often seen on the ship's radio updating the world's press on the mission. Likewise, the motivation and dedication of the crew – most of whom have taken leave from their day jobs to volunteer – is assumed, rather than made a focal point. ....

The result is an epic tale of hunter and hunted: a Moby-Dick for the environmental age. ....

.. ..

Saturday, November 21, 2009 

Category: News and Politics

The End of Japanese Whaling in the


Southern Ocean is in Sight



Commentary by Captain Paul Watson



The Yakuza controlled Japanese whaling fleet left Japan yesterday and have officially begun their 6,000 mile voyage to the remote waters of the Australian Antarctic Territory. Their intention is to slaughter 925 protected Antarctic Minke whales and 50 endangered Fin whales inside the Southern Ocean Whale Sanctuary in violation of the global moratorium on commercial whaling and in violation of the Antarctic Treaty.
These people are poachers. They are criminals and they are engaged in the remorselessly cruel slaughter of the largest, most intelligent and most socially complex sentient beings in the oceans.

The Japanese fleet of eight ships will head south down the Eastern Pacific coastline of Asia past the West coast of Australia to the edge of the Antarctic ice fields, and there they will unleash the horror of their harpoon cannons with the intent to extinguish the lives of nearly a thousand whales. They are doing this under the ridiculously bogus excuse that the killing is being conducted for “scientific research.”

Whaling is “tradition” in Japan that began at the same time that torture for scientific research became a tradition. They began doing lethal so-called scientific research on human beings just before and during World War II and in 1946 with the help of General Douglas MacArthur they set up their Antarctic whaling fleets to begin their pogrom of cetacide in the Southern Oceans.

Our job is to stop the killers and to save the lives of as many whales as possible and the Sea Shepherd ships Steve Irwin and the newly secured Ady Gil are in position to depart from Fremantle, Western Australia on December 7th. The Japanese fleet and the Sea Shepherd fleet should arrive off the coast of Antarctica at around the same time.
Sea Shepherd will once again be taking a film crew to the Southern Oceans, this time to film the 3rd season of Animal Planet’s hit show Whale Wars.

Hopefully, it will be the last season for the show. Our objective is to sink the Japanese whaling fleet economically and I believe that this is the year that we have the best chance of doing so. We have the only hit TV show on the air where the stars want the show to end because the end of Japanese whaling will bring an end to Whale Wars.
The last three Sea Shepherd Antarctic Whale Defense campaigns, Operation Leviathan (2006-2007), Operation Migaloo (2007-2008) and Operation Musashi (2008-2009), were successful in cutting whale kill quotas in half and negating the profits of the whaling fleet. The whalers are now deeply in financial debt and the newly elected government of Prime Minister Jun Hoshikawa has indicated they are fed up with the massive subsidies the government is paying to support an industry that is losing money and is giving the nation of Japan a very negative image worldwide.

The Sea Shepherd’s long-term objective is to sink the Japanese whaling fleet economically. We are very close to bankrupting the fleet and I am confident that we will hurt their profits significantly this year to the point we may be able to force the shutting down of the fleet.

It also gives the Hoshikawa government an honorable way to retreat from their whaling activities in the Southern Ocean. Discontinuing the subsidies for an industry that consistently fails to make a profit is simply good business. The spending review committee established by Japan's new Prime Minister, Yukio Hatoyama, has recommended that funding for the Overseas Fishery Cooperation Foundation be cancelled after 2010. The OFCF is the largest financer of the Tokyo-based Institute of Cetacean Research.

If the government loans for whaling are revoked, it is unlikely the Institute of Cetacean Research can continue to operate. Reports in the Japanese media claim that the Institute has failed to fully repay more than one billion yen in previous OFCF loans. The Sea Shepherd Conservation Society is the reason these loans have not been repaid. Our interventions have been successful in negating their profits for the last three fiscal years.

In addition, the committee will be reviewing the spending by the Department of Foreign Affairs and their expenditures of bribes to third world countries in exchange for their pro-whaling votes at the International Whaling Commission meetings.
There is a good possibility that many of these third world Japanese puppet governments will not have the money to make an appearance at the 2010 meeting of the IWC scheduled for next June in Morocco.

United States President Barack Obama will be visiting Japan this week and the whaling issue is on the agenda for his meeting with the Prime Minister.

The position of the United States is one of opposition to commercial whaling and lethal scientific research whaling, as expressed in a statement by the U.S. State Department, which says, "The United States is committed to advancing the global conservation and management of large whale populations through science-based policies and leadership in the International Whaling Commission (IWC).

"The United States continues to view the commercial whaling moratorium as a necessary conservation measure and believes that lethal scientific whaling is unnecessary in modern whale conservation management," the State Department says.
Meanwhile, 40 environmental nongovernmental organizations that work in Latin America have requested that their governments take diplomatic actions against the killing of whales "under supposed scientific purposes" to save the lives of hundreds of whales in the Southern Hemisphere.

Adding weight to our efforts is a petition presented earlier this week to Japan and signed by all the Latin American commissioners of the International Whaling Commission.

Elsa Cabrera, executive director of the Cetacean Conservation Center of Chile, said, "The vast support of the Latin-American NGOs is a strong message to our governments about the need to publicly reject the so-called 'scientific whaling' operations, an activity that is not regulated and that it is conducted without any mechanisms of control in waters that paradoxically are a whale sanctuary."

In the letter the NGOs affirmed, "Since the implementation of the moratorium on commercial whaling, the government of Japan has captured more than 8,000 whales in the Southern Ocean Whale Sanctuary.

Roxana Schteinbarg, executive coordinator of the Whale Conservation Institute of Argentina declared, "We are confident that our governments will pay attention to our concerns and begin actions that can stop the Japanese whaling fleet."

The Sea Shepherd ships will be heading into a confrontation with the Japanese whaling fleet with the eyes of the world upon us. We have a difficult challenge. The Japanese whalers will try to kill us and if they do injure or kill any of my crew or myself the government of Japan will justify and defend their crimes.

We on the other hand must intervene to halt their whaling without injuring any of the Japanese whalers knowing that no matter how non-violent our efforts, our governments will not support us if we get into trouble and will condemn our actions no matter how careful we are in our tactics.

The Greenpeace Foundation has already condemned Sea Shepherd efforts and continues to raise funds to save the whales despite the fact that they have not returned to the Southern Ocean Whale Sanctuary in the last two years and they have no plans to return this year. Once again the Sea Shepherd ships will take on the whalers without any support from any other non-governmental organization or government.

It has been a prolonged campaign and this is the 6th voyage that Sea Shepherd has mounted to intervene against the Japanese whale poachers. Our strategy all along has been to sink the Japanese whaling fleet economically – to bankrupt them.

I am confident that we will achieve this objective and I am hopeful that this will be the last voyage that we will need to undertake to defend the whales in the Southern Ocean Whale Sanctuary.
Friday, November 20, 2009 

Category: News and Politics

Sea Shepherd Improves Radio 



Communications in Galapagos



After several months of installing repeaters and programming and adjusting radios, Sea Shepherd Galapagos has officially handed over a large amount of radio communication equipment to the National Police in Galapagos. This donation of 110 mobile radios, repeater stations, car radios, and adjoining infrastructure will be largely sufficient to supply the entire police force in the Galapagos. We are pleased to say that good communication on each island as well as inter island communication is now possible through radios. We hope that these radios will improve the safety of the police officers and will help the police to continue their important work protecting the people and the environment of the Galapagos Islands.

The improved communication will be useful for all other Sea Shepherd projects in our quest to provide assistance and strengthen the existing law enforcement in the Galapagos. With the ongoing destruction of this wonderful and unique place, we have to always stay one step ahead of the criminal elements only interested in making a profit out of the natural world. We are confident that the improved communication will make the work of law enforcement easier and more efficient.

Sea Shepherd will ensure this new network stays functional in the coming years. Where needed we will conduct maintenance and replace parts.

This project wouldn’t have been possible without the help of:

- ECWF (www.ECWF.org) from the Netherlands, who generously donated the equipment

- Marcel Wensveen the radio technician from the Netherlands who donated much of his time and a lot of his personal funds installing and preparing the equipment
- LUSH (www.lush.com) who sponsored the project

- Malena Garcia, our Galapagos Coordinator, who got the donation through Ecuadorian customs in record time and whose patience is exemplary dealing with bureaucracy
 

PHOTOS

Captain Alex Cornelissen thanks the Ecuadorian police for the cooperation in this project
Captain Alex Cornelissen thanks the Ecuadorian
police for the cooperation in this project
Colonel Almeida and Captain Cornelissen sign the donation paper
Colonel Almeida and Captain Cornelissen
sign the donation papers
The moment of acceptance of the equipment
The moment of acceptance of the equipment
Captain Barriga and Lieutenant Maldonado flank our Sea Shepherd staff members Marcel Wensveen and Malena Garcia
Captain Barriga and Lieutenant Maldonado flank our Sea Shepherd
staff members Marcel Wensveen and Malena Garcia
Heads of police in Galapagos and Sea Shepherd
Heads of police in Galapagos and Sea Shepherd
Marcel Wensveen giving some useful tips
Marcel Wensveen giving some useful tips
Sea Shepherd is as always part of law enforcement
Sea Shepherd is as always part of law enforcement
Some of the donated equipment
Some of the donated equipment
Tuesday, November 17, 2009 

Category: Movies, TV, Celebrities


Save The Waves Film

 Festival goes big in

San  Francisco
 
 
Capt. Paul Watson : photo Giovanni Agnoli



Film News

Save The Waves Film Festival Rocks San Francisco

Surfersvillage Global Surf News, 16 November, 2009 : - - On Friday night, San Francisco’s surfer and environmentalist communities came together for a very special event at the Victoria Theatre: the first annual Save The Waves Film Festival, merging film, art, music, surf and environment together into a seamless blend of stoked fun and heartfelt love for the oceans.

Featuring the infamous Plastic Wave (barreled by plastic), the SF premiere of “Lost Prophets” and Captain Paul Watson presenting “The Cove”, as early as 6pm a line snaked around the block past the immigrants, pimps and traffic on Mission Street. Area hipsters in skinny jeans and fixed-gear bikes were greeted by a completely sold-out Victoria Theatre, environmental activists drank plenty of beer and “Save The Waves” shone hard in bright marquee lights high above 16th Street.

But even the hipsters couldn’t stay away. Everyone attending was extremely happy with smiles all around, and the organic beer, local wine and Hawaiian-made vodka didn’t hurt either. Art sparked from ocean activism and watery environmental issues was created exclusively for the evening by local San Francisco surfer-artist Travis Weller and his gorgeous prints sparkled on the theatre lobby walls.

Captain Paul Watson arrived with his Sea Shepherd crew in tow, all semi-famous from their TV successes on Animal Planet’s “Whale Wars” and most recently “South Park.” Captain Paul minced no words when presenting “The Cove” and its dolphin conservationist message to the cheering crowd: “what we are doing to our oceans is insane and will destroy civilization if we don’t change our ways. If you’re eating fish you are part of the problem.”

Local character was also celebrated in “Devil’s Teeth” – an emotional & chilling short film by Roger Teich & Ron Elliot about diving with great white sharks at the Farallon Islands.

Local surf rockers The Eldorados played two sets of surf-drenched hard rocking classics for the packed theatre and the roof was nearly blown off. Save The Waves Coalition ended the night with an amazing raffle of great prizes. A late-night Q&A with Paul Watson and Charles Hambleton, star of “The Cove”, sent everyone off with a healthy dose of introspection on the unhealthy reality of our oceans and marine life.

This was another amazing local San Francisco event produced by Save The Waves Coalition. It looks like Save The Waves Film Festival is here to stay!

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Tuesday, November 17, 2009 

Category: News and Politics
Chief Investigative Reporter George Knapp and Photojournalist Matt Adams

I-Team: Sharks Slaughtered to the Brink of Extinction


Posted: Nov 16, 2009 8:47 PM PST ..>..>Updated: Nov 17, 2009 1:11 AM PST
 
Sharks have lived in the oceans for 400 million years and since they are at the top of the food chain, they have shaped the evolution of pretty much everything else that lives in the sea.

It means that anything that puts sharks at risk could have profound effects on the ecosystem of the oceans.

Right now, sharks are in trouble and it's mostly because of soup.

Try to find someone who will defend shark finning. You can't. Neither the stores that sell the fins nor the restaurants that serve the soup. Shark fin soup is considered a status symbol in Asian cultures, but when the I-Team asked the local Asian Chamber of Commerce where it stands on sales of shark fin, the spokesperson said she was unaware of any controversy about shark finning.

It's illegal to import shark fins into this country, but in Las Vegas, it's easy to find this harvest of shame.

“Once you have spent time in the water with sharks, it's a whole new ball game. They are inquisitive. They have their own unique personalities. They are incredible,” said Kim McCoy with Sea Shepherds.

Ocean wildlife experts like those with the famed Sea Shepherds organization see sharks differently from those of us who still get goose bumps from the theme to Jaws. New research shows that sharks are social, playful, have problem solving skills and are nothing like the ravenous monsters of the movies.

But sharks will never be mistaken for big-eyed baby seals or even friendly dolphins, so there's been no public outrage about what surely constitutes a worldwide slaughter -- about 100 million sharks a year are killed by humans. Shark populations have declined by 70 to 90-percent worldwide, depending on the species. Eighteen shark species are listed as endangered and most of them are dying for one thing -- soup. More specifically, soup made from shark fins.

“The shark fins themselves don't have any taste. They tend to take on the taste of whatever they are cooked with,” said McCoy. “I don't understand why people would do it, but that is very much ingrained in certain cultures that it is a status symbol.”

The booming Chinese economy has been bad news for sharks. It means shark fin soup is now affordable for the middle class. It's served at weddings and special occasions to impress clients or relatives.

Eighty-percent of the shark fin trade goes through Hong Kong, but the fins are harvested all over the world. It's easy to go online and find suppliers in countries of Africa, Asia and Europe.

“A lot of people don't have sympathy for sharks, but they have their place in the ocean ecosystems. What we are doing to them is unconscionable. Killing 100 million sharks worldwide,” said Wayne Pacelle, president of the Humane Society of the United States.
Pacelle says the techniques of the slaughter are the unkindest cut of all. Sharks are hauled onto boats, their fins are cut off with knives or saws and then the still-living shark is dumped back into the ocean, unable to swim. They sink to the bottom and bleed to death.

While Pacelle would still object to the practice if the whole shark was used for food, he finds the practice incredibly wasteful. “It seems particularly wasteful and horrible and gruesome and inhumane to capture a shark, cut off the fin, a small portion of the total weight, and throw the rest of the animal away when we absolutely don't have to do this. It has no nutritional value. It has nothing to do with a staple of the diet of any culture in the world. It is just a wasteful, cruel exercise,” he said.

Unfortunately, as shark populations decline, the price of shark fin goes up, prompting more fishermen to harvest fins for the not-so-black market. Under U.S. law, it is illegal to import shark fins by themselves -- they have to be attached to the whole shark. But the law is widely ignored.

In the Chinatown section of Las Vegas Chung Chou City is seemingly a clearinghouse for shark fins. Bag after bag lined the shelves, ranging in price from $158 a pound to more than $400 per pound. The inventory of this one store represents the loss of thousands of sharks.

At the Ginseng Market, animal activist Linda Faso found more of the same. “He turned around, pulled it off the shelf, laid it on the counter. I said, ‘Where did it come from?’ He said, ‘Hong Kong.’ It was $69 for this dried shark fin and it feeds up to 10 people,” she said.

For those on a budget, you can buy cans of the soup for $6 at Asian markets. It's commonly found in Asian restaurants and buffets. Sea Harbour at Caesars Palace describes the soup as a delicacy. It's also been offered at the Wynn Buffet. Mandalay Bay removed the soup from its menus as a condition for setting up its Shark Reef attraction. The Venetian also barred its sale, but so many off-Strip eateries serve it. Joyful House offers five different shark fin soups. Orchids Garden and Harbor Palace both feature it as a specialty.

“It's nothing hidden about it. There is no shame involved at all. It's just something that has got to stop,” said Faso.

While shark fins have no nutritional value and no taste, they do pack a lot of mercury. So men who eat a lot of the soup can become sterile. Call it Jaws -- the Revenge.
The only way this is going to change is for consumers to express themselves as they did with dolphin-safe tuna. Know what you're eating and how it is obtained.
The is also a bill stalled in Congress. It's called the Shark Preservation Act, but with so many larger priorities, it's just sitting there. It will take an activist public to get it moving.

In January, the Sea Shepherds plan to launch an international media campaign called Operation Shark Friendly, so maybe that will get people riled up.
 

Monday, November 16, 2009 

Category: News and Politics

Pictured: The bullet-proof 'Batmobile' 



set to wreak havoc on the Japanese whaling fleets

By Sara Nelson
Last updated at 9:14 AM on 14th November 2009
It's sleek, it's fast, and it's reinforced with a ton of bullet-proof Kevlar armour.

The mean-looking Ady Gil is the Sea Shepherd Conservation Society's newest weapon in their ongoing battle against Japanese whalers.
The trimaran - previously known as Earthrace - recently set the world powerboat record for circumnavigation.

Sea Shepherd Society vessel the Ady Gil

Wave piercer: The ship can submarine up to 23 feet underwater and runs on renewable biodiesel fuel

Sea Shepherd Society vessel the Ady Gil

Sleek: The Ady Gil is capable of up to 50 knots and will be used to block harpoon ships from illegally slaughtering whales


Described as a ‘wave piercer’ which can submarine up to 23 feet underwater, the craft completed the round-the-world trip using 100 per cent renewable biodiesel fuel, with a net zero carbon footprint.


The 24,000 nautical mile journey took just 60 days, 23 hours and 49 minutes, smashing the previous record by over two weeks.

Now the newly-renamed vessel has been unveiled as the Sea Shepherd's new weapon in the organisation's sixth campaign against whaling, Operation Waltzing Mathilda, which will launch from Australia early next month.

The boat was relaunched in LA last month.
batmobile
Batman car

Similar: The Ady Gil looks like the Batmobile, right


Earthrace was renamed as a tribute to the ship’s benefactor, Hollywood businessman Ady Gil, who donated two thirds towards the $1.5m cost.

The craft, which is capable of up to 50 knots, will be used to intercept and physically block harpoon ships from illegally slaughtering whales.

In preparation for its journey, a ton of Kevlar armour has been added to the Ady Gil to limit damage caused by the Antarctic ice – technically making it bullet proof too.

Captain Paul Watson, who is the Sea Shepherd President and Founder, told the Globe and Mail: ‘It looks like the kind of boat Batman would drive.'

The underside of the boat is armed with two giant propellers

The underside of the boat is armed with two giant propellers capable of hitting speeds of 50 knots

Star support: Captain Paul Watson is joined by ardent environmentalist and Hollywood actress Daryl Hannah prior to his anti-whaling missing last year


Star support: Captain Paul Watson is joined by ardent environmentalist and Hollywood actress Daryl Hannah prior to his anti-whaling missing last year


Skirmishes have broken out between Japanese whalers and the group in the past, more often involving stink bombs than bullets.

But Sea Shepherd is upping the ante with the Ady Gil.

It will be joined by the group’s flagship, Steve Irwin (which is capable of 19 knots), as they head to the Southern Ocean Whale Sanctuary.

‘We’re very excited that the Ady Gil will be joining the Steve Irwin in Antarctica this campaign,' Captain Watson said.

‘With these two ships, we will mount the most ambitious and aggressive effort to date to obstruct the slaughter of the whales in the Southern Ocean.’

Chuck Swift, deputy CEO, said: ‘The Ady Gil gives us the speed necessary to catch and stay with the Japanese whaling fleet.

‘We are very optimistic that with these two ships, and some other surprises, we will shut down whaling in the Antarctic Whale Sanctuary.’
Watson added: ‘Our objective is to literally sink the Japanese fleet – economically. To bankrupt them, and we’re doing pretty well on that.
‘They haven’t made a profit in three years.’

The Ady Gil and the Steve Irwin are the two remaining ships in the Sea Shepherd Society’s fleet. A third vessel – the Farley Mowat – was sent to protest against Canadian seal hunting last year and was seized by officials.

Sister ship: The Steve Irwin will be joining the Ady Gil on its Operation Waltzing Matilda mission

Sister ship: The Steve Irwin will be joining the Ady Gil on its Operation Waltzing Matilda mission

Friday, November 13, 2009 

Category: News and Politics

November 13, 2009, 12:29 pm

Japan’s Budget Review May Rein In Whaling



There are hints that  Japan’s review of government spending in a number of areas could diminish the billions of yen spent each year to sustain the country’s annual whaling excursions to the oceans around Antarctica. Greenpeace sent an alert around about the budget review just before President Obama flew to Japan. For the moment, it’s unclear whether the whaling program — which Japan has long cast as  important scientific research but many  biologists and activists decry — is in danger, according to our Tokyo reporters. There’ll be updates here as needed.

Sea Shepherd boatSea

Shepherd Conservation Society
A speedboat built to race around the world is now poised to chase Japan’s whale-hunting fleet.

In the meantime, Paul Watson, who has brought the skill set of P. T. Barnum (and some would say Blackbeard) to the realm of marine conservation,  recently unveiled the Ady Gil, a new weapon in the  whale wars between his group, the Sea Shepherd Conservation Society, and Japan. The high-speed boat, named for the California donor who paid two-thirds of its $1.5 million price tag, is ready to chase Japan’s speedy whale-hunting vessels when the killing begins.

Friday, November 13, 2009 


http://www.news.com.au/couriermail/story/0,23739,2...

SEA Shepherd, the eco-warrior conservation group labelled pirates by Japanese whalers, is launching its most provocative anti-whaling campaign yet.

It will use as a logo artwork that adorned the fighter planes of the legendary Flying Tigers who fought the Japanese in China during World War II, shooting down 300 planes.

The Japanese Government has labelled Sea Shepherd a pirate group for its confrontational high-seas action, putting its ships and small craft between h... Click Headline for Full Story