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AlonzoMourning23
02-16-2007, 09:11 PM
Greenpeace ready to tow stricken whaling ship

Antarctica — The Greenepace ship Esperanza is ready to tow the stricken Japanese whaling vessel the Nisshin Maru out of danger and prevent potential Antarctic environmental disaster.

Onboard the Esperanza in the Southern Ocean - campaigning against illegal whaling - we find ourselves in an unexpected situation. The vessel we had been searching for - the Japanese factory whaling ship Nisshin Maru - issued a distress call after a serious fire broke out on board.

The Esperanza is now less than a day's sailing from the disabled whaling ship. We've made a commitment to the fleet to assist the crew in any way possible, and make an environmental impact assessment if needed. One crew member of the Nisshin Maru is still missing, and it's reported that the ship could be carrying approximately 1,000 tons of oil and sitting 100 nautical miles from the largest Adelie penguin colony in the world.

The Fisheries Agency of Japan has already refused help from Greenpeace. However, the Esperanza is continuing on its course to the stricken vessel.

"Our first thoughts are for the missing crewman and the rest of the people on board. This is not a time to play politics from behind a desk in Tokyo," said Karli Thomas, expedition leader on board the Esperanza. "This is a human tragedy and a potential environmental disaster. We have a moral obligation to act and there is a legal obligation under the Antarctic treaty for the Nisshin Maru's owners to accept our help."

Greenpeace has offered to tow the whaling factory ship out of the pristine Antarctic environment of the Southern Ocean Whale Sanctuary. The Esperanza's captain, Frank Kamp, had ten years experience working on salvage vessels before joining Greenpeace. Another vessel may be required to tow the 8,000-ton Nisshin Maru beyond Antarctic waters through the stormy "Roaring Forties" weather, though we'll be making every effort to take the Nisshin Maru all the way into port.

"While we recognise the humanitarian and environmental need to assist the Nisshin Maru, we are not in the business of salvaging a whaling ship in order for it to start whaling again next season," added Thomas. "This tragedy should mark the end of this terrible business and the government funding should be invested not in a new or repaired ship, but in something that the Japanese people can truly benefit from."

As of this writing, the Esperanza will arrive at the Nisshin Maru's location in a matter of hours. You can stay updated on this story via the Greenpeace Ocean Defenders Weblog direct from the ship, and see what the Esperanza sees via the live webcam.

The accident comes on the heels of a meeting in Japan aimed at reintroducing commercial whaling.Â*Â* Almost without exception, pro-conservation members of the International Whaling Commission boycotted the meeting.


http://www.greenpeace.org/international/news/greenpeace-ready-to-tow

AlonzoMourning23
02-17-2007, 02:30 AM
THE crippled Japanese whaling ship Nisshin Maru which lost a crew member overboard in an accident last week is refusing offers from Greenpeace to tow it from the Ross Sea off Antarctica.

The 8000-tonne vessel was badly damaged by a fire on Thursday and authorities are concerned large amounts of oil aboard could leak and affect the world's largest penguin breeding rookeries.

The body of crew member Kazutaka Makita, 27, who was reported missing immediately after the fire, was recovered in Antarctic waters today.

Greenpeace ship <i>Esperanza</i> reached the Japanese vessel early today, but so far the Japanese had refused offers to tow the stricken ship to safety, Greenpeace chief executive Steve Shellhorn said.

"Our ship has made an offer to tow the vessel to New Zealand, but so far that offer has been refused,'' Mr Shellhorn said.

"But our ships are in dialogue, and the Japanese vessel has asked us to provide some ice reports, because we have a helicopter.''

The Nisshin Maru is currently receiving support from two other Japanese whaling vessels, but forecast bad weather still threatens to cause an environmental disaster, Mr Shellhorn said.

"It has no power of its own, but there are two Japanese vessels on either side of it giving it power,'' he said.

"Right now the weather conditions are quite calm, which is a good thing, but our concern is eventually the weather will turn, probably in about two days or so.

"A ship that size with no power, if it flounders, it will sink, or it could be pushed onto the ice shelf. In either case we would have a major environmental disaster in the pristine Antarctic environment.''


http://www.news.com.au/couriermail/story/0,23739,21241313-29277,00.html