Governments and Billionaires Increasingly Saying No To Dolphin Captivity & Adopt a Dolphin for April 2018 in this week's Dolphin outlook!

  2:01
Adopt a Dolphin Update - April 2018
Whale and Dolphin Conservation (WDC) 
These days, more people are publicly condemning and even going as far as prohibiting dolphin captivity - and this goes far beyond just activists. Increasingly, even those who have an active stake in cetacean captivity are coming to realize what some have been saying for decades: that keeping dolphins and whales captivity is cruel, outdated, and ethically indefensible.

The Dominican Republic is host to five captive dolphin facilities, with these businesses drawing many tourists in the past. However, the Ministry of Environment and Natural Resources recently prohibited the purchase or sale of dolphins for the next five years. While existing facilities are allowed to operate, this new law will make it virtually impossible for any new facilities to be created – and it’s a step in the right direction toward banning captivity altogether.

Meanwhile, Richard Branson, the billionaire mogul behind Virgin Airlines and other ventures, has been slowly, but perhaps surely, coming around. Four years ago, Branson made the commitment not to support dolphin facilities that source dolphins from the wild - including places like the dolphin-killing cove in Taiji. Now, he’s actively supporting - to the tune of $300,000 so far - the creation of seaside sanctuaries, places where captive cetaceans are allowed a respite from the demands of captivity and performing daily for tourists.

On April 18, 2018, Branson tweeted: “To my grandchildren, the idea of dolphins jumping through hoops will seem bizarre, a relic of the past, and that’s the way it should be.”

View image on Twitter
To my grandchildren, the idea of dolphins jumping through hoops will seem bizarre, a relic of the past, and that’s the way it should be https://virg.in/JEw 
Branson is not alone in voicing these sentiments. John Racanelli, CEO and President of the Baltimore Aquarium, decided years ago to permanently retire its captive dolphins and build North America’s first dolphin sanctuary. On January 25, 2018, he said the following in an interview: 

“We need to get out of that awful era that we have been through for the last 100 years of caging animals… [The ocean] has been their habitat for probably — actually, probably millions of years, ever since Florida was a giant coral reef. So, the idea of the dolphins finding a home in a place where dolphins have always made a home is a really good one. And it is a big driver for us to want to do this here.”

Not everyone who makes these kinds of statements is happy about it, however. John Nightingale, CEO of Vancouver Aquarium, had to (perhaps begrudgingly) announce the shutting down of the facility’s cetacean captivity program. On January 18, 2018, he put the blame on people speaking out against this type of entertainment, saying, "What used to be a distraction had become a more serious impediment to us achieving our mission. It's time."

He noted that the public pressure was sufficiently bad enough that, “...you also have to be realistic, and it has gotten to the point where the debate in the community, with the lawyers, with the politicians... is debilitating our work on our mission."

In Defense of Animals’ Cetacean project continues to work to prevent the opening of new facilities within the United States. Stay tuned to our blogs for updates and ways that you can get involved.