| Catches lowest in a decade |
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| Thursday, 27 August 2009 05:59 | |||
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Haugland said that financial problems for industrial processing plants, which led to a brief suspension of hunts in June, were a main cause of the fall. "The bottleneck is the whaling industry and the distribution system. That is the main issue. Demand for whale meat is comparable to what we've had in recent years," Haugland said. But environmental group Greenpeace said ever fewer Norwegians eat whale meat. "The Norwegian market for whale meat is in decline, as elsewhere on the planet," said Truls Gulowsen of Greenpeace. "The Norwegian government should phase out whaling." In 2004, parliament voted to raise quotas "considerably" - whalers took that to mean a return to an average of 1,800 whales caught in the 1960s-70s. Since 1993, however, the peak year for whale catches was 647 in 2003.
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Norway's whale catches are set to fall to the lowest in more than a decade in 2009, a decline blamed by the industry on financial problems and by environmentalists on dwindling demand for the meat.
