First beluga whale sanctuary in Iceland to welcome new arrivals next year

The natural sanctuary in an inlet on an island off Iceland's southern coast is the first of its kind.

By Reuters June 27, 2018
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Two beluga whales will set off from an aquarium in China to a secluded bay in Iceland next year, where they will live in a sanctuary billed as the first of its kind for cetaceans (whales, dolphins, and porpoises), the SEA LIFE Trust charity said on Tuesday.

Little Grey and Little White will make the more than 6,000-mile (9656-kilometer) trip by land, air and sea next spring to Heimaey, an island off southern Iceland in a move environmental campaigners hope will allow more captive whales to be reintroduced to their natural habitats.

The SEA LIFE Trust, which is working on the project with the Whale and Dolphin Conservation (WDC) charity, said the inlet at Klettsvik Bay, measuring up to 32,000 square meters (344,445 square feet), was picked to provide a more natural sub-Arctic environment and wild habitat for the whales.

The two 12-year-old female beluga whales currently live at Changfeng Ocean World in Shanghai, owned by Merlin Entertainments. Their new home, the SEA LIFE Trust Beluga Whale Sanctuary, will also have a care facility and visitor center.

The two whales are being trained for the long trip as well as the cool North Atlantic waters with fast swims to build up their strength and exercises to hold their breath underwater for longer. They are eating more calories and also being introduced to stretchers that will be used for the journey.