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Shipping giant changes course to save Sri Lanka whales

COLOMBO (AFP) – Animal rights activists yesterday cheered a move by a shipping giant to alter course in Sri Lankan waters to avoid collisions with blue whales, the world’s largest mammals.

The island’s southern coast has an unusually high density of blue whales, classed as endangered on the IUCN Red List of Threatened Species, and is one of the world’s busiest international shipping lanes.

Campaigners believe more than a dozen of the gigantic animals – the largest ever to have lived on Earth at up to 30 metres long and 150 tonnes – have been killed in collisions with commercial ships in the last decade.

There have also been occasional reports of fishermen dying when their boats were run down by container ships in the area, a rich fishing ground.

International activists and local environmentalists have for years pressed authorities to shift the east-west shipping routes 15 nautical miles further offshore.

Geneva-based Mediterranean Shipping Company (MSC), one of the world’s biggest container carriers, announced on Thursday that it had adjusted its routes around Sri Lanka by that distance to reduce the risk of accidents involving whales, dolphins and porpoises.

A blue whale swims in the deep waters off the southern Sri Lankan town of Mirissa. PHOTO: AFP

The move could reduce the strike risk as much as 95 per cent, the company said.

It is also ordering its smaller feeder vessels in the area to slow to 10 knots in blue whale habitats.

The International Fund for Animal Welfare welcomed the announcement, calling it “good news for both blue whales and for people”.

Sri Lankan animal rights activist and researcher Gehan Wijeratne said the topography of the ocean floor, currents and monsoons make the sea off southern Sri Lanka rich in nutrients and marine life.

Any move to improve the safety of fishermen and shipping will have a positive impact on whales and whale watching, he added.

Leading Sri Lankan environmentalist Jagath Gunawardena told AFP that MSC’s unilateral action exposed Colombo’s failure to protect marine life and fishermen.

“We should be embarrassed that we failed, but an international shipping company had to take the initiative,” he said.

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