Norway scraps controversial seal hunting subsidy

An adult female harp seal sticks her head out of an ice floe off the coast of the Magdalen Islands, Quebec a few weeks before th
An adult female harp seal sticks her head out of an ice floe off the coast of the Magdalen Islands, Quebec a few weeks before the annual seal hunt on March 3, 2008

Norway's parliament has voted to scrap a controversial subsidy for seal hunting, potentially spelling the end of the much-criticised activity, a lawmaker told AFP on Friday.

A majority of lawmakers voted late Thursday to delete a 12-million-kroner (1.3-million-euro, $1.6-million) for the seal hunt from the 2015 budget, said Geir Pollestad.

The subsidy has amounted to up to 80 percent of revenue for seal hunters.

"It's important to emphasise that parliament has not decided to ban the seal hunt, but we fear that the hunt will actually disappear along with the subsidies," said Pollestad, head of the committee on trade and fisheries, who himself is opposed to abolishing public aid.

"The industry is in a difficult situation following the end of trade in with the EU," he said. Norway is not a member of the European Union.

He said that with about 12,000 seals hunted every year, the government subsidy amounts to about 1,000 kroner (110 euro, $136) per animal.

The EU introduced in 2010 an embargo on products from the commercial seal hunt in Norway and Canada, arguing the measures were in response to moral outrage in the public over what was considered cruel hunting methods.

Seals are usually hunted with rifles or with so-called "hakapiks", sticks fitted with a metal head to batter the animals to death.

© 2014 AFP

Citation: Norway scraps controversial seal hunting subsidy (2014, December 12) retrieved 29 March 2024 from https://phys.org/news/2014-12-norway-scraps-controversial-subsidy.html
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