Extra: A Modern Whaler Speaks Up (Update)

额外:一位现代捕鲸者发声(更新)

Freakonomics Radio

2025-08-27

26 分钟
PDF

单集简介 ...

Bjørn Andersen has killed hundreds of minke whales. He tells us how he does it, why he does it, and what he thinks would happen if whale-hunting ever stopped. (This bonus episode is a follow-up to our series “Everything You Never Knew About Whaling.”)   SOURCES:Bjørn Andersen, Norwegian whaler.  RESOURCES:"Digestive physiology of minke whales," by S.D. Mathiesen, T.H. Aagnes, W. Sørmo, E.S. Nordøy, A.S. Blix, M.A. Olsen (Developments in Marine Biology, 1995)."Norway Is Planning to Resume Whaling Despite World Ban," by Craig Whitney (New York Times, 1992)."Commission Votes to Ban Hunting of Whales," by Philip Shabecoff (New York Times, 1982).  EXTRAS:"Everything You Never Knew About Whaling," series by Freakonomics Radio (2023).
更多

单集文稿 ...

  • Hey there, it's Stephen Dubner.

  • We just republished a three-part series called Everything You Never Knew About Whaling.

  • We spoke with economists, historians, Moby Dick scholar,

  • and an environmental activist whose mission in life is to stop whale hunting.

  • We also tried to speak with a whale hunter,

  • but public sentiment against whaling is so strong that most modern whalers don't want to speak with the press.

  • Also, there just aren't that many whalers around anymore.

  • In the 1960s, at the peak of industrial whale hunting,

  • thousands of whalers in more than a dozen countries were killing tens of thousands of whales a year.

  • Today, commercial whaling happens in only three countries, Norway, Iceland, and Japan.

  • And collectively, they only kill about a thousand whales a year.

  • There just isn't much demand for whale meat, it turns out, and even less for whale oil.

  • Anyway, we couldn't get a modern whaler to go on the record with us.

  • But then right as we were finishing our series, we landed our white whale,

  • Bjorn Andersen, one of the biggest whalers in Norway.

  • The Norwegian government allows for the harvest of 1,400 minka whales a year.

  • The minka is plentiful.

  • It's not at all an endangered species.

  • Even so, Andersen and his fellow whalers usually take less than half of the allowed quota each year.

  • Like I said, just not much demand for whale meat these days.