Pew Environment Group

Media Inquiries

If you are a journalist and would like additional information, please visit the Media Contacts page.

Media Contacts

Subscribe to News Feeds

Pew offers news delivered to your desktop via RSS feed. Subscribing is easy. To learn more or get started, follow the link below.

Subscribe to News Feeds

For The Record

When the Pew Environment Group’s work is questioned or criticized we respond through letters to the editor or op-eds.

Read Pew's Responses

International Whaling Commission Proposes Compromise on Ban

Media Coverage

Publication Name

The Washington Post

Author(s)

Juliet Eilperin

A new International Whaling Commission proposal that would authorize commercial whale hunting for the first time in 24 years in exchange for reducing the number killed each year sets in motion a public diplomacy battle.

A global whaling moratorium took effect in 1986, but three nations -- Japan, Norway and Iceland -- have continued hunting whales, killing about 1,700 annually in recent years. The United States and other anti-whaling countries have sought to strike a deal that would create an international monitoring system to ensure a steadily declining hunt.

...

Susan Lieberman, director of international policy at the Pew Environment Group, said that the proposal had good elements such as increased monitoring and a stronger IWC conservation panel, but that the Southern Ocean quotas are not based on scientific calculations and go against the idea of establishing protected areas.

Read the article International Whaling Commission Proposes Compromise on Ban on The Washington Post's website.
 

Related News and Resources

  • How Overfishing Impacts You: Subsidising Fishing - How Many Times Must We Pay for Our Fish

    • Fact Sheet
    • May 21, 2012

    When you buy your fish at the supermarket or fishmonger, you might think that’s the only time you pay for your fish. Well, you would be wrong. This briefing exposes how Europeans are paying again and again for the same fish caught by EU vessels.

    More

  • Ecology of Columbia Estuary Under the Microscope

    • Media Coverage
    • May 18, 2012
    (The Daily Astorian) The three-day Columbia River Estuary Conference, which delved into new scientific findings and their management implications, concluded Thursday in Astoria.

    More

  • Protect America's 'Founding Fish'

    • Action Alert
    • May 15, 2012
    The incidental catch of millions of river herring and shad annually by the mid-Atlantic mackerel fishery remains largely unmonitored and unregulated. The Mid-Atlantic Fishery Management Council will meet in June to decide how to protect river herring and shad at sea. This is your opportunity to help save these treasured species.

    More

  • The Bottom Line: Even Fish Need Yearly Checkups

    • Opinion
    • May 14, 2012
    On May 14, NOAA released its 2011 fisheries report. Last year, thanks to our system of science-based management, six U.S. ocean fish stocks were fully rebuilt to healthy levels, others continued their recovery, and significant progress was made in ending overfishing.

    More

  • Critically Depleted Fish Lose Protection

    • Press Release
    • May 10, 2012
    Holly Binns, a project director for the Pew Environment Group, issued the following statement today in response to the U.S. Commerce Department’s final approval of a plan to reopen fishing for six species in water deeper than 240 feet along the southeast coast, from North Carolina to Florida.

    More

  • Depleted Stocks Could Lead to Endangered Herring

    • Media Coverage
    • May 08, 2012
    (Warwick Beacon) Officially, at least according to previous years, the herring run isn’t over for another 10 days. But, the seasonal clock is about two weeks ahead of itself this year and Paul Earnshaw and the Buckeye Brook Coalition are seeing fewer fish run up the brook to Warwick Pond. Instead, they are seeing fish return to the bay.

    More

  • A Federal Offense: River Herring Robbery

    • Fact Sheet
    • May 02, 2012
    River herring are small fish with a big impact on our river and marine ecosystems. Massive industrial fishing boats began targeting Atlantic herring in the mid-1990s, and scoop up an alarming number of river herring along with their sea-dwelling cousins.

    More

  • The Bottom Line: Little Fish Do Matter

    • Opinion
    • May 02, 2012
    Small fish such as sardines and anchovies don’t get much love. But these little fish provide essential food for all the marine life that we like to catch, eat or watch. Unfortunately, most fisheries managers haven’t thought too much about these prey fish, either—until now, that is.

    More

  • Comments on the Proposed Rule for Amendment 24 to the Snapper Grouper Fishery Management Plan in the South Atlantic

    • Other Resource
    • Apr 30, 2012
    On behalf of the Pew Environment Group, we are writing to support the immediate approval and timely implementation of Amendment 24 to the Snapper Grouper Fishery Management Plan in the South Atlantic.

    More

  • Letter Re: Red Snapper State Consistency with Federal Regulations

    • Other Resource
    • Apr 27, 2012
    On behalf of the Pew Environment Group’s Gulf of Mexico Fish Conservation Campaign, we offer our support for the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission (FWC) staff’s recommendation and urge the FWC to adopt rules for Gulf red snapper consistent with federal regulations.

    More

  • Safeguarding Ocean Earth

    • Other Resource
    • Apr 26, 2012

    This June, on the 20th anniversary of the first Earth Summit in Rio de Janeiro, leaders from around the world will return to the Brazilian city for the United Nations Conference on Sustainable Development (Rio+20) and have the opportunity to correct our course to ensure our ocean can sustain marine and human life in the decades to come.

    More

  • How Overfishing Impacts You: It's fish, Captain, but not as we know it!

    • Fact Sheet
    • Apr 25, 2012

    A great fraud is being committed on an unsuspecting public in some EU member states: fish is being mislabelled and passed off as more expensive or even sustainably caught species.

    More

  • Citizens United to Protect the Maurice River and its Tributaries Hosts Talk on Longlining in Gulf of Mexico

    • Event
    • Apr 24, 2012

    Citizens United to Protect the Maurice River and its Tributaries will host a talk regarding surface longlining in the Gulf of Mexico.

    More

  • American Shad

    • Fact Sheet
    • Apr 23, 2012
    American shad populations are in serious decline along the Atlantic Coast. By restoring American shad we can protect rivers and coastal ecosystems where shad provide a crucial source of food to other wildlife including striped bass, bluefish, shorebirds, and marine mammals. At the same time, we can revive a favorite sport fish and a prized delicacy.

    More

  • OCEAN2012: Transforming European Fisheries

    • Compilation
    • Apr 23, 2012

     These briefings published by OCEAN2012 expose how overfishing  harms the EU's coastal communities and affects the lives of  countless Europeans.  This series of briefings illustrates the impacts of overfishing on people or marine ecosystems caused by the excess removal of millions of tonnes of marine life every year.

    More

See more...

X
Sign In

Member Sign In

Forgot Password?
Submit Not a Member? Join!
X

Forgot Password?

Send Password Not a Member? Join!
X

Change Password

X
(All Fields are required)
Send Message
Share this on: