CHAIRMAN: DR. KHALID BIN THANI AL THANI
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF: PROF. KHALID MUBARAK AL-SHAFI

Views /Opinion

A way for China to help save Africa’s elephants

Adam Minter

23 Aug 2014

By Adam Minter

There’s no consensus on just how many of Africa’s elephants are left. The World Wildlife Fund, for example, estimates that the population could be as few as 470,000 and as many as 690,000. Whatever the exact figure, it’s clear that China’s demand for ivory has created significant financial incentives for poachers to hunt the herds that remain scattered across the continent.
On Monday, a group of researchers published what they billed “the most comprehensive assessment of illegal ivory harvest to date.” Their conclusion, based on two methods of assessing illegal killing, is that poaching has not only reduced elephant populations, but it has also become unsustainable. The problem, beyond how many elephants are being killed, is the lack of surviving males in their prime years.
The numbers are shocking. From 2010 — the year during which “an overharvest-driven decline” probably started — to 2012, about 33,630 animals were poached annually on average, for an annual average illegal killing rate of about 6.8 percent. 
In 2011, the most deadly year surveyed, somewhere from 35,000 to 47,000 elephants were poached (according to one of the methods), roughly an 8 percent rate. Things are improving: Preliminary data for 2013 suggest that the poaching rate slowed, though to a still unsustainable 3.7 percent.
It’s an interesting point. After all, the sheer numbers documented in the study suggest that anti-poaching efforts in Africa — though laudable and often successful — are ultimately stopgap measures on a vast continent with elephant herds located in countries that have highly variable economic and political circumstances. Soon, conservationists are going to have to focus on reducing demand.
That won’t be easy. Ivory carving has a long and illustrious artistic history in China. Antiques are highly prized, but even newly carved ivory chopsticks and figurines remain status-enhancing, high-end gifts.
But just because it’s difficult to stem Chinese demand for a high-end animal product doesn’t mean it’s impossible. Consider ongoing campaigns against eating shark fins. Ten years ago, shark-fin soup was almost obligatorily served at Chinese wedding banquets, official dinners and other high-status events. Demand was huge: Seafood markets across Asia were packed with shark fins.
In early August, WildAid released a report titled “Evidence of Declines in Shark Fin Demand, China.” According to its data, 85 percent of surveyed Chinese consumers reported they had given up eating shark-fin soup in the last three years, with almost two-thirds of them citing awareness campaigns. 
Can a similar campaign on behalf of elephants make a difference? According to one Chinese ivory expert, many Chinese may not know that their collectibles come from poached elephants. Indeed, Yao Ming, together with WildAid and others, have taken up the cause of the elephants as well as rhinos. 
Ming appears in a documentary highlighting the effects of the illegal wildlife trade and petitioned the Chinese government to impose a complete ivory ban. These are certainly modest steps, but they might just be the best hope that Africa’s elephants have.
WP-BLOOMBERG

By Adam Minter

There’s no consensus on just how many of Africa’s elephants are left. The World Wildlife Fund, for example, estimates that the population could be as few as 470,000 and as many as 690,000. Whatever the exact figure, it’s clear that China’s demand for ivory has created significant financial incentives for poachers to hunt the herds that remain scattered across the continent.
On Monday, a group of researchers published what they billed “the most comprehensive assessment of illegal ivory harvest to date.” Their conclusion, based on two methods of assessing illegal killing, is that poaching has not only reduced elephant populations, but it has also become unsustainable. The problem, beyond how many elephants are being killed, is the lack of surviving males in their prime years.
The numbers are shocking. From 2010 — the year during which “an overharvest-driven decline” probably started — to 2012, about 33,630 animals were poached annually on average, for an annual average illegal killing rate of about 6.8 percent. 
In 2011, the most deadly year surveyed, somewhere from 35,000 to 47,000 elephants were poached (according to one of the methods), roughly an 8 percent rate. Things are improving: Preliminary data for 2013 suggest that the poaching rate slowed, though to a still unsustainable 3.7 percent.
It’s an interesting point. After all, the sheer numbers documented in the study suggest that anti-poaching efforts in Africa — though laudable and often successful — are ultimately stopgap measures on a vast continent with elephant herds located in countries that have highly variable economic and political circumstances. Soon, conservationists are going to have to focus on reducing demand.
That won’t be easy. Ivory carving has a long and illustrious artistic history in China. Antiques are highly prized, but even newly carved ivory chopsticks and figurines remain status-enhancing, high-end gifts.
But just because it’s difficult to stem Chinese demand for a high-end animal product doesn’t mean it’s impossible. Consider ongoing campaigns against eating shark fins. Ten years ago, shark-fin soup was almost obligatorily served at Chinese wedding banquets, official dinners and other high-status events. Demand was huge: Seafood markets across Asia were packed with shark fins.
In early August, WildAid released a report titled “Evidence of Declines in Shark Fin Demand, China.” According to its data, 85 percent of surveyed Chinese consumers reported they had given up eating shark-fin soup in the last three years, with almost two-thirds of them citing awareness campaigns. 
Can a similar campaign on behalf of elephants make a difference? According to one Chinese ivory expert, many Chinese may not know that their collectibles come from poached elephants. Indeed, Yao Ming, together with WildAid and others, have taken up the cause of the elephants as well as rhinos. 
Ming appears in a documentary highlighting the effects of the illegal wildlife trade and petitioned the Chinese government to impose a complete ivory ban. These are certainly modest steps, but they might just be the best hope that Africa’s elephants have.
WP-BLOOMBERG