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Stop tourists eating whales

Get whales off the menu

What's the problem?

In Iceland, Norway and Greenland, the whaling industry is propped up by tourists from the UK, the US and the rest of Europe who seem to leave their senses at the airport and eat whale meat when holidaying in these countries.

Please don't eat whale meat on holiday in the mistaken belief that you are sampling traditional food or having a cultural experience. You are not doing either. All you are doing is encouraging further whaling.

Together we need to:

  1. Educate and inform holiday makers so that they choose not to eat whale meat.
  2. Encourage tourists to avoid restaurants that serve whale meat.
  3. Persuade restaurants and hotels to take whale meat off their menus.
  4. Support the whale watch industry as a viable economic alternative to killing whales.

 

Bowhead and Minke grill

What you need to know

Find out how tourists are supporting whaling and what you can do to help.

Common minke whale

Minke whales are harpooned off Iceland largely to cater for tourist demand. Eating whale meat is neither traditional nor popular in Iceland. Minke whaling is a relatively recent industry and only 1.5 % of the Icelandic population regularly consumes whale meat.

Common minke whale

More than two thirds of the whales killed by Norwegian whalers are female and almost half of them are pregnant. Whale meat is not even a popular dish in Norway, despite huge government subsidies. It's eaten by the older generation and tourists.

Bowhead whale © Alan Airey

Greenland is allowed to kill a certain number of whales for Inuit people deemed to have a genuine need for meat and blubber. But Greenland wants to expand its sales and targets holidaymakers through restaurants, buffets and barbecues offering 'A Taste of Greenland'.

Latest  Campaign News

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Not so clean cut: why WDC is right to bellyache about Norwegian whale meat!

Further to our recent story that a consignment of around 60 tons of Norwegian minke whale meat was given away to local needy people, comes...
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Really, Norway, you want to kill even more whales though no one wants to eat them?

Norwegian Fisheries Minister, Per Sandberg, has confirmed that Norway has allocated itself a quota of 999 minke whales for the 2017 catch, an increase of 119...
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Why we should support Iceland’s whale watch industry

‘I’m not going to visit Iceland until the whale hunts stop’ is a common response to hearing about the whale slaughter that takes place every...

Get whales off the menu: we've achieved a lot together

Fewer tourists eating whales in Iceland. In 2009, 40% of visitors admitting eating whale meat. In 2016 it was just 12%.

Radisson hotel group removed whale meat from Iceland hotel menu after complaint from WDC.

A WDC undercover investigation exposed Greenland's commercial sales.