UN-Backed Treaty Suspends Ivory Exports Due To Deficient Monitoring Of Poaching
New York, Oct 5 2006 2:00PM
The United Nations-backed body overseeing trade in endangered species today suspended the export of 60 tonnes of ivory
from Botswana, Namibia and South Africa because of shortcomings in the system to monitor elephant populations and
poaching.
The Geneva-based Secretariat of the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES) agreed in principle to the sales in 2002 on condition that the Monitoring of Illegal Killing of Elephants (MIKE)
system establish up-to-date and comprehensive baseline data on poaching and population levels.
Today’s meeting of the CITES Standing Committee determined that this condition has not yet been satisfied and the sales
may not go forward at this time.
CITES, which is administered by the UN Environment Programme (UNEP), banned the international commercial ivory trade in
1989. In 1997, recognizing that some southern African elephant populations are healthy and well managed, it allowed
Botswana, Namibia and Zimbabwe to make a one-time sale to Japan totalling 50 tonnes. Those sales took place in 1999 and
earned some $5 million.
The now suspended sales authorized in 2002 allowed the export of 30 tonnes from South Africa, 20 tonnes from Botswana
and 10 tonnes from Namibia.
In 2004, requests by several southern African countries for annual ivory quotas were turned down by the Conference of
the Parties (COP) to the Convention. All legal sales of ivory derive from existing stocks gathered from elephants that
have died as a result of natural causes or culling.
The long-running debate over elephants has focused on the benefits that income from ivory sales may bring to
conservation and to local communities living side by side with large and often dangerous animals against concerns that
such sales may increase poaching. The baseline data will make it possible to determine objectively what impact future
ivory sales may have on elephant populations and poaching.
In a related decision, the Standing Committee decided that Japan had established a sufficiently strong domestic trade
control system to be a trading partner allowed to purchase the ivory when sales eventually proceed.
Ends