Diners cheer whale comeback

Source:AFP Published: 2019/7/3 18:23:41

Japan insists quotas will keep population sustainable


"Two sashimis, three steaks," cries the waitress at one of ­Tokyo's most famous whale restaurants during a frantic lunchtime service where ­Japan's resumption of commercial whaling has cooked up new hope.

Mitsuo Tani has spent 46 of his 64 years preparing and cooking whale meat and hosts a mixed clientele at his restaurant: salarymen in white shirts gulping down a quick lunch ­before heading back to the office, single women, retired couples.

Whale steak is the most popular dish at 980 yen ($9). A thin rectangular piece of meat with as much rice, miso soup, vegetables and iced tea as the customer can eat. Also flying out of the kitchen is whale sashimi - raw slices of whale flesh, skin or liver.

Japan's resumption of commercial whaling has prompted fury from other countries and campaigners, with activists saying that one of the three species targeted is threatened with extinction and sub-populations of the other two are depleted.

But veteran whale chef Tani is keen to promote the health benefits of whale meat.

"It is five times lower in calories than beef, 10 times lower in cholesterol, two times less fat than chicken. It's packed with iron. But abroad, people do not know this," he told AFP.

Not all would agree with Tani's health-based sales pitch, however. 

In 2015, when the Environmental Investigation Agency tested the mercury ­levels of whale meat sold in ­Japan, they found it riddled with the substance.

Whipping up a "whale roast beef" at the pass, Tani explained that he had to move from the northern city of Sendai after the 2011 tsunami and the price of whale meat soared amid a significant drop in supply.

In Tokyo, he has never had any problem procuring meat. While Japan was still part of the International Whaling Commission (IWC), the whales caught in Antarctic waters for "research" purposes still ended up as sashimi and steak on plates around the country.

Ironically, with Japan leaving the IWC and resuming commercial whaling off its own coast, the quantity of meat may decline. 

Japan set an annual quota of more than 600 whales while in the IWC.

The cap now stands at 227 until the end of the year - 52 minke, 150 Bryde's and 25 sei whales.

It is not the only country carrying out hunts, with Norway and Iceland conducting them in recent years and indigenous people from Alaska to Greenland allowed exemptions to the moratorium.

Hitting back at those who fear the resumption of commercial whaling further endangers whales, Japanese authorities say the quotas have been set carefully "to keep the whale population at a sustainable level."

"I'm scared that the quantity of whale meat will go down," admitted Tani.

Another whale restaurant boss, Sumiko Koizumi, hailed the resumption of whaling as "an excellent thing" and said it was down to chefs to promote the meat and dream up new recipes.

Removing the stigma around whale meat will make it easier for consumers, she said, "first because supermarkets will be more inclined to offer it and wholesalers will listen more to our needs and be in a position to meet them."



Posted in: ASIA-PACIFIC

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