Copy, sign and fax the letter below to Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, or use the text as the basis for your own letter. Here’s why:
Today marks one week since the Nisshin Maru first caught fire, tragically killing one crew member and disabling the ship here in the Ross Sea. The whaling fleet has given us daily progress reports on their repairs, but every day it is the same: we are told they are working to fix the Nisshin Maru’s engines, they would like the Nisshin Maru to sail out of here under its own steam, but there is more work to do so they cannot say when that will be.
Enough is enough. An entire week has passed and the Nisshin Maru is still sitting here, posing an unacceptable risk to human life and the pristine Antarctic environment.
It’s time to get the Nisshin Maru and the whaling fleet out of here. The Japanese government’s decision to let the Nisshin Maru sit here for over a week is irresponsible and shows a lack of concern for the lives of those who remain on the whaling ships as well as the Antarctic environment. The Antarctic is a global common and is protected by the Antarctic Treaty System. As a signatory, the Japanese government has a responsibility to minimize and hopefully eliminate harm to the Antarctic environment.
The U.S. is also a signatory to the treaty that protects Antarctica, yet the U.S. State Department said today that it would leave the matter of the Nisshin Maru to the government of New Zealand. The U.S. cannot sign a treaty and then choose whether it will act to enforce it or not. The Bush administration has a legal and moral responsibility to intervene and do all that it can to pressure the Japanese government to get the Nisshin Maru out of the Antarctic. Yet the U.S. has said it will stand by and defer this whole matter to the government of New Zealand.
The letter to fax to Secretary of State Rice follows. Please let her know that you care about Antarctica, and that you want the whaling fleet out of the Antarctic, for good.
Thank you.
Melanie
The Hon. Condoleezza Rice
Secretary of State
U.S. Department of State
2201 C Street NW
Washington, DC 20520
Via Fax: 202-647-2283
Dear Secretary Rice,
I am writing to request that you take urgent action to get the stricken whaling vessel, Nisshin Maru, out of Antarctica as soon as possible. The Nisshin Maru caught fire on February 15 and tragically, one crew member was killed. Since then the ship has been disabled deep in the Ross Sea with a reported 1,000 to 1,300 metric tons of fuel on board.
The Greenpeace ship Esperanza rushed to the Nisshin Maru’s assistance and has been standing by since arriving on February 17. All of the Esperanza’s offers to tow the stricken vessel out of the Antarctic have been refused. The Japanese government must act to get the Nisshin Maru out of the Antarctic, whether it’s with a tow from Greenpeace or a tow from other vessels in the whaling fleet.
I am deeply disappointed that the U.S. has deferred the issue of the Nisshin Maru to the government of New Zealand. Antarctica is a global common, and moreover, the U.S. has signed treaties designed to protect it.
I urge you to uphold the spirit and intent of the Antarctic treaty by doing all that you can to urge the Japanese government to get the Nisshin Maru out Antarctica as soon as possible to reduce and hopefully eliminate any further risk to human life and the sensitive marine environment. The Japanese government’s whaling program threatens all marine life in Antarctica and therefore, this season must be the last.
Sincerely,
Your Name Here
This morning at 5:40am marked five days since the Nisshin Maru first sent out a mayday distress call. Since then, the ship has been sitting here, disabled, in the Ross Sea. Greenpeace has been on-scene with the Nisshin Maru for over three days to offer assistance, including towing the crippled whaling vessel north, out of the Antarctic. All of our offers to tow the vessel to safety have been refused by the Japanese authorities in Tokyo. We have been told that the whaling fleet will use its own vessels to tow the Nisshin Maru north, however, the Esperanza still remains the best-equipped ship for the job. Our captain, Frank Kamp, has ten years experience working on salvage vessels, including experience in the hazardous waters of the North Sea.
It’s not just Greenpeace that’s anxious for the Nisshin Maru to get a move on out of here. The New Zealand government has gone well beyond the bounds of normal diplomatic language to make the point. New Zealand Prime Minister Helen Clark is clearly losing patience and said to the Japanese earlier this week: “My advice is if you can't see a way of getting the boat out of there without some help from Greenpeace or from somebody else, the world is going to be very upset if there is a spill in that area.” She has also said that the Japanese government’s whaling program could be subject to a new wave of criticism if the Nisshin Maru spills oil into the pristine Antarctic environment. Other governments should be asking the same questions.
It seems that Ms. Clark sees what is blindingly obvious: the only issue at hand right now is getting the oil-laden Nisshin Maru out of the Antarctic immediately. Unfortunately, the Japanese government has blinders on, and is more concerned about saving face and not accepting help from Greenpeace – a group that has vociferously opposed its high seas whaling program for decades – than with getting its ship out of this environment. The Japanese politicians say they can tow the Nisshin Maru with other boats from the whaling fleet, but still, the Nisshin Maru sits here. It’s a game of Russian Roulette and the odds get worse with every passing day.
In the U.S., the disaster caused by the Exxon Valdez running aground in Alaska almost 18 years ago sparked new state and federal regulations governing oil spill response and clean up plans. The problem with these plans is that they may look good on paper, but in reality, they don’t pass muster. In my ten years with Greenpeace in Alaska, I have reviewed and commented on oil spill plans for offshore oil projects in the Beaufort Sea, a part of the Arctic Ocean just off Alaska’s north coast. I’ve also observed “spill drills” where oil spill response equipment is put to the test in the Beau
fort Sea.
My experience and first hand observation is that oil spill response at high latitudes ranges from incredibly difficult to impossible, even in summer months with 24 hours of light and relatively warm temperatures that hover around freezing. Even in the short polar summer, weather can be unpredictable and fierce, and pack ice is always a complicating factor. Year round, extreme wind, temperature and ice conditions often make it too risky to human life to even respond to an oil spill in the first place. And tricky broken ice conditions in spring and fall make response virtually, if not completely impossible.
And what does “cleaning up” an oil spill really mean? Even under optimal conditions such as a temperate climate, calm seas, no wind and oil response equipment close at hand, only 15 percent of the spilled oil is actually removed from the environment. The rest remains, smothering birds and other wildlife so that they die of hypothermia, suffocation or by poisoning through ingesting oil in an effort to clean themselves. The 18-year anniversary of the Exxon Valdez is five weeks away and, even though Exxon Mobil declared the area “cleaned up” two years after the spill, numerous scientific studies show that it still poses far ranging problems for fish and wildlife, and continues to degrade the environment. Indeed, when the spill first happened, scientists predicted the oil would be long gone by now. What they have found is that the oil is “weathering” away at a rate of three to four percent per year, which translates into the oil persisting in the environment for decades.
It doesn’t take a rocket scientist to figure out that the only way to protect the fragile polar marine environments in the Arctic and Antarctic is to prevent an oil spill from happening in the first place. It’s time for the Japanese to stop playing Russian Roulette with the pristine Antarctic environment and get their crippled whaling vessel, the Nisshin Maru, out of here as soon as possible.
Melanie
It's now Monday afternoon and we've been with the Nisshin Maru for more than two days. Luckily the weather is holding - it's calm by Southern Ocean standards with light winds, relatively calm seas and this morning there was even a patch of blue sky here and there. But we are still at 73 degrees south latitude and it is getting late into February, which means the clock is ticking and at some point soon, this area will start freezing over in earnest. There's pack ice 14 miles to the east of us and 20 miles to the southwest of us, and things can change so quickly here in terms of temperature and wind that ice conditions can change radically in a matter of hours.
The Nisshin Maru (and the Esperanza, since we are shadowing it and the fleet) drifted 30 miles to the north in the last 24 hours. Thankfully, the overriding currents flow north, pushing the disabled ship, the whaling fleet and us toward open water. But 30 miles is an insignificant distance given the size of the Ross Sea, an area that will be completely frozen over once temperatures drop.
We are in regular contact with the whaling fleet to provide updates on ice conditions. They’ve thanked us for the information and have kept us posted on the progress of repairs on board the Nisshin Maru. One of the things they’re trying to fix is the ship’s heating system. They’ve been working on an unheated ship for days and that won’t change until the system is fixed. It's gotta be a nasty situation. In my experience, having spent a decent amount of time at high latitudes, being perpetually cold is a form of stress that affects not only your body, but your mind and spirit as well.
I'm feeling increasingly anxious and agitated as the days come and go and there is no movement on the part of the whaling fleet to get the disabled Nisshin Maru out of here. My agitation is not due to boredom or wishing I could be doing something else. I know from experience in the Arctic that at high latitudes, autumn can be a sudden flash of time that delineates summer and winter, and winter can come on suddenly and violently. We’ve been here for over two days, waiting on stand by, even though we have the equipment and expertise to tow the Nisshin Maru out of Antarctica. What are they waiting for?
The Nisshin Maru still has, according to media reports, 1,000 or more tons of fuel on board, and the whaling fleet has hundreds of people dispersed between its seven ships. I can't say in strong enough terms that this is not the time to be bobbing around like a cork in the Ross Sea. No matter how I try to think about it, I cannot understand why a decision was not made days ago to hightail it out of here as soon as possible. The Nisshin Maru first put out its mayday alert at 5:40am on February 15. That was over four days ago. They've waited long enough. It's time to start heading north out of these treacherous waters. Every click of the clock increases the risk that this slow motion disaster will take more lives and lead to an environmental disaster.
Melanie
Yesterday morning at 7am I was in the bridge with my morning coffee when third mate Zeger sited through binoculars the Nisshin Maru and other vessels from the whaling fleet. As we got closer, we saw that the re-supply and re-fueling vessel Oriental bluebird was on one side of the disabled Nisshin Maru, while one of the catcher boats (the vessels with the harpoons the actually kill the whales) was on the other side. Two other catcher boats were hovering near the Nisshin Maru. On our stern was the US Coast Guard icebreaker Polar Sea. The Polar Sea was doing just as we were: getting closer to the Nisshin Maru to assess the situation.
At 8am we radioed the Nisshin Maru, but the ship did not answer, which was not a surprise given the ship had a serious fire and is most likely without power. We radioed to the catcher boat, Yushin Maru, and told them we are here only to assist in whatever way was required. The Yushin Maru replied that it would be helpful if we could assess ice conditions in the area, and it may be helpful if the Esperanza helped them navigate once towing is underway. Since then we have been standing by, waiting to see if the Nisshin Maru and the fleet are in need of anything from food, water and blankets to medical care or anything else.
We’ve had a number of conversations with the fleet throughout the day where they have updated us on their progress and we have provided information on the location of the ice pack and ice-free waters. At around 3pm, the fleet contacted us to give us an update on their progress, and at that time they informed us that they had found the body of their missing crew member.
Needless to say it’s been an emotional day. My thoughts are with the crew member’s family and friends, as well as with the rest of the crew of the Nisshin Maru. I can’t imagine how they must be feeling right now. What a terrible tragedy. I will keep them in my prayers.
I have read many times about instances where tragedy and misfortune break down walls and transcend differences between people. I know that right now, my heart goes out to the people on the ships in the distance. It sounds like they are appreciative that the Esperanza is here, on stand-by and ready to assist, and that they would not hesitate to ask us for help if they needed it. In times like these the walls come down and the spirit of compassion, kindness and cooperation take over. At least that’s how it feels from my vantage point.
Yesterday the Institute for Cetacean Research issued a statement saying that the disabled Nisshin Maru would not accept any help from Greenpeace because we are “terrorists.” I hope that the ICR executives sitting in Tokyo have finally come to realize that non-violence underlies all that we do, and that the “peace” in Greenpeace is an integral part of all of our words and actions.
Melanie
This afternoon (Feb 12) at 4:55pm the Esperanza received a distress call from the Japanese whaling fleet's unarmed sighting vessel, the Kaiko Maru.
The Esperanza offered immediate assistance, heading at full speed to its position.
According to the Rescue Coordination Center of New Zealand, first reports stated the Kaiko Maru was "under attack." Later reports claimed a collision between the Sea Shepherd vessel Robert Hunter and the Kaiko Maru, with the Robert Hunter receiving a hole in its hull above the water line and the Kaiko Maru suffering unspecified damage to its propeller.
We completely condemn any violent action by anyone. Potentially endangering lives in the middle of the Southern Ocean is completely unacceptable. In addition, while these three vessels are engaged in a potentially life threatening incident, just over the horizon hunter ships with grenade-tipped harpoons could be killing whales. That is where the focus should be.
At approximately 6:15pm, the Rescue Coordination Center of New Zealand requested that the Esperanza "stand down,” which means we could stay in the area but not go near any of the ships. We informed the Rescue Center that we would remain within VHF range in case assistance was needed.
Just now, at 8:15pm, the Rescue Coordination Center of New Zealand declared an end to the mayday by sending a fax that read, “seelonce feenee.” That’s the phonetic spelling for the French phrase that means “end of silence. ” In ship communication-speak, that means “enforced radio silenced is finished.” In plain English, it means the mayday is over and they’ve called it a day.
We now go back to the reason we came here: to stop the Japanese government from killing whales in the Southern Ocean Whale Sanctuary.
Melanie
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