
A criminal complaint has been filed regarding a humpback whale being killed by a krill supertrawler, the Chilean-flagged Antarctic Endeavour, in the pristine waters of the Antarctic. The complaint has been filed by the director of the Fisheries and Aquaculture Service in Chile against the owner of the vessel and its master.
Images from the deck of the supertrawler show an approximately 10m long whale with a bloody jaw, trapped inside a net filled with krill. The death of this latest humpback whale as a result of the krill fishery joins the tragic deaths of four whales in 2021-22 season and another four whales in 2023-24.
Bob Brown Foundation travelled to Antarctica in 2023 to expose and document the plunder of krill by supertrawlers and the ever-growing conflict between Antarctic wildlife and these massive fishing vessels.
The Foundation authored a report that found that krill from Antarctica was ending up on Australian supermarket shelves, chemists, and was even been used to feed Tasmanian farmed salmon, with one feed factory in Tasmania using 1,200 tonnes of krill a year.
Call for ban
Bob Brown Foundation is calling for a complete ban on industrial fishing anywhere in Antarctica and the Sub-Antarctic and for the Australian government to support this call at the next Commission for the Conservation of Antarctic and Marine Living Resource (CCAMLR) meeting this October.
‘Krill fishing is an environmental crime that must end,’ said Alistair Allan, Antarctic and Marine Campaigner at Bob Brown Foundation.
‘To have yet another whale killed further affirms that these krill supertrawlers are becoming the new whaling vessels of the Antarctic. Whether they kill whales in their nets or steal the whales’ primary food source right out of their mouths, these krill supertrawlers are a catastrophe for whales and Antarctic wildlife.
‘Every year, supertrawlers from around the world descend upon the Antarctic krill population to plunder one of the world’s last great wildernesses for products we don’t even need.
‘Krill are the foundation of the Antarctic ecosystem and targeting them must be banned. Antarctica should be a permanent refuge for wildlife, not a plunder zone for industrial supertrawlers,’ said Mr Allan.


For four decades The Echo has printed the stories some people loved, some people hated, and some pretended not to read. If you want us to keep telling the truth, the real truth, not the sugar-coated version. We’ll need your support to keep the presses rolling.