This summer, Iceland’s only whaling company has halted its fin whale hunt, citing lack of demand in Japan. While it’s a rare moment of relief, it’s not a victory—Japan, Norway, and Iceland remain the only countries still conducting legal commercial whaling. Under the false banner of tradition and science, whales are still being killed—and the fight continues.
A Fragile Win
Fin whales, the second largest animals on Earth, were nearly driven to extinction by commercial whaling. That killing continues today, despite overwhelming global opposition and the ecological importance of these migratory giants.
A Changing Fight for Whale Survival
At the same time, another slaughter goes unchecked in the Faroe Islands. Every year, pilot whales and white-sided dolphins are herded into shallow bays and butchered by the hundreds. This isn’t about food security—it’s a cultural practice defended by tradition but condemned worldwide.
And while some whales are being hunted, others are dying at the hands of industry at sea—caught as bycatch, as we saw last month in Antarctica when krill trawlers overwhelmed known whale feeding grounds, or killed by ship strikes as ocean traffic increases around offshore oil and wind operations.
Sea Shepherd has spent decades defending whales from harpoons—but today that mission must expand. We’re documenting krill trawlers in Antarctica, pushing for bans on whaling, and calling out senseless hunts in places like the Faroe Islands. The threats are evolving—but so are we.
Why It Matters
Whales are under siege—and they need defenders. These animals don’t just deserve protection—they play a critical role in ocean ecosystems, carbon cycling, and biodiversity at every level.







