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RAGNAR TH. SIGURDSSON/GALBE for TIME
DON'T BLUBBER: Björgvinsson wants to convince his countrymen that whales are "a living resource"


A Whale of an Opportunity
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Posted Sunday, April 20, 2003; 14.23 BST
Marine conservationists cry, "Save the whales!" Asbjörn Björgvinsson tags on: Because it pays. "I cannot argue that we should save whales because I love them so much," says the Icelander, who gave up a successful engineering career in 1997 for this cause. "That wouldn't work." Especially in a country where whales are not seen as objects of sympathy, but as meat — and therefore business.

So Björgvinsson, 45, the godfather of Iceland's whale-watching industry and a pioneer of European ecotourism, is bringing new business to the table. Whale-watching is Iceland's fastest-growing tourism sector, pumping $8 million into the economy last year. A trifling sum? Not to coastal towns like Húsavik (pop. 2,500), which have been losing young people for lack of jobs. And not when you consider that's twice the annual revenue whaling generated in the 1980s, before a moratorium was imposed under global pressure.

When Björgvinsson arrived in Húsavik, on Iceland's north coast, in 1997, "I was a laughingstock," he says. He painted a 33-m-long blue whale on the pavement outside the local hotel. Few were around to notice; Húsavik was a place where "people only stopped to take a picture of the church," he says. Last year, 25,000 came to whale-watch; 70 people owe their jobs to the boom.

Bjorgvinsson, founder of the Húsavik Whale Center, the country's only cetacean educational facility, has trying to bridge the wide gap between Icelandic tradition and conservationism, usually seen as the province of meddling outsiders like Greenpeace, which he says "is still considered like a terrorist group in Iceland." Last fall, Iceland rejoined the International Whaling Commission, a first step toward resumption of whaling. Pro-whaling forces argue that a cull of minke whales is needed to rescue collapsing fish stocks. Björgvinsson disagrees, challenging them to make a better case than his: that whales are worth more to Iceland alive than they are dead.

Previous: Josek Krecek Next: Yannis Boutaris






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On New Year's Eve, the Miseries of Minsk
As Russia hikes up the cost of gas for Belarus, the mood turns gloomy
Mogadishu at 60 Miles an Hour
Arms merchants are once again doing brisk business after a rapid change of power in this tough town, but so far the peace has held
The Year of The Nuke
A rundown of the world's nuclear powerhouses, and what to expect in the coming months

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FROM THE APRIL 28, 2003 ISSUE OF TIME MAGAZINE; POSTED SUNDAY, APRIL 20, 2003

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