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Thomas Jazrawi

As the IWC celebrates its 70th birthday, the 2016 biennial plenary meeting opened in the coastal town of Portorož.  For the second time, the meeting is generously hosted by the Government of Slovenia, and began with welcoming addresses from the Minister of the Environment and Spatial Planning, Mrs Irena Majcen, the State Secretary at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Mrs Darja Bavdaž Kuret, and Deputy Mayor of Piran, Mrs Meira Hot.

Over five days, the Commission will consider one proposed Schedule Amendment and seven proposed Resolutions, as well as reports on the intersessional work of its six committees and working groups.

Second day

The second day of the IWC Plenary began with a vote.  Consensus was not reached on a proposal for the establishment of a whale sanctuary in the South Atlantic and therefore a vote was required.  

As a potential amendment to the IWC Schedule (the document which sets out specific IWC regulations) this vote required a three quarters majority in order to succeed. 64 governments were present with 38 voting yes, 24 voting no, and 2 abstentions. 

The three quarters majority was not met and the proposal was not passed.

Initial discussions also took place on five Resolutions.  These are on:

Two Resolutions were introduced Monday, the first on Enhancing the Effectiveness of the International Whaling Commission, and the second on Improving the Review Process for Whaling under Special Permit. 

As with the two Resolutions introduced on Monday, the discussions on each of these proposals will continue in the proponents and the Chair deciding when to bring each one back to the Plenary for further discussion.

Subsistence whaling

Aboriginal Subsistence Whaling (ASW) was also on today's agenda.  A Resolution passed at the 2014 IWC Meeting sought a more consistent and long term approach to considering ASW at the Commission, and a report was received on progress. 

The Plenary also heard a presentation on the Rights of Indigenous People by Dr Dalee Dorough, a Expert Member of the United Nations Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues, and discussed what further work would be undertaken over the next intersessional period and before ASW whaling quotas are re-considered at the 2018 Commission meeting.

Away from the plenary, a 2014 Memorandum of Cooperation extended its impact with two more member governments becoming signatories. 

The Governments of Mexico and the Republic of Korea joined Japan, the Russian Federation and the USA who established the Memorandum in conjunction with the IWC and the International Union for the Conservation of Nature (IUCN). 

The Memorandum reinforces the importance of collaboration between the range states of the critically endangered western North Pacific gray whale.

Læs meget mere på IWC’s hjemmeside i linket nedenfor.