Zimbabwe’s pitch to reopen ivory trade lobby raises questions

15 African nations were invited to the Elephant Summit to garner support for overturning global ivory trade ban

Thursday 01 December 2022 08:39 EST
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By Nokuthaba Dlamini for Vic Falls Live

Zimbabwe’s aggressive lobbying to overturn a global ban on the sale of ivory has raised more questions than answers with conservationists arguing that the country’s claims that it has stockpiles worth US $600 million are an exaggeration.

The southern African country hosted a three-day conference where it invited 15 nations to push for the legalisation of ivory trade to finance conservation efforts.

Ahead of the conference, the Government showcased its ivory stockpiles at a warehouse just outside the capital Harare to European Union diplomats where officials said the country had the potential to earn US$600 million if allowed to sell its stocks.

The position, however, is proving to be a tough sale for some conservation experts attending

the conference being held at the Hwange National Park, Zimbabwe’s biggest game reserve, which is home to the largest population of elephants in the country.

A number of conservationists said Zimbabwe’s claims did not make sense given the fact that the highest price for worked ivory in the market around 2015 was US$ 2,100 (£1,670) per kilogramme, and the price has since crashed. The wholesale price of raw ivory is estimated to be US$150 (£119) per kilogramme.

At that price, even if Zimbabwe were able to sell its entire 130 tonnes of stockpiled ivory, it

would earn only roughly US$20 million (£15.9 million).

Zimbabwe has threatened to quit the UN Convention on International Trade in Endangered

Species (CITES) if the trade ban is not lifted. CITES banned the sale of ivory in 1989 to save elephants from extinction due to widespread poaching.

“The figures don’t make sense,” said a South African conservationist on the sidelines of the conference.

“Most of these countries are using a rate which was set in 2008 and it was quite high at US$167 (£132) per kilogramme, but figures have gone down because the (Asian) countries they are targeting (as the potential markets) bought the ivory at that time, and they are still consuming the old stock.”

The conservationist said the formal ivory markets that countries such as Zimbabwe were targeting are saturated.

China, which used to be the biggest buyer for legal ivory, has banned all trade, as has Vietnam. Japan, which bought ivory in the past, still has large amounts from earlier one-off sales.

“These Asian countries that they are targeting have no room for extra stocks,” he added. “The other observation is that these countries are evaluating their stocks using pricing that is exaggerated and that on its own has created some confusion.”

Another southern African conservationist said countries should be focusing on reforms within CITES to help fund conservation work.

Leaving CITES would not allow them to sell ivory as buyers would also have to leave the international convention, which would affect trade in many other wildlife and plant species.

“There is no money from these governments to deal with conservation, so it’s a question of them asking where they can get money,” he said.

“Zimbabwe has threatened to withdraw from CITES if not heard, but the challenge with that is that they can be selling those stockpiles illegally and the Asian buyers that they are targeting - China, Vietnam, Japan - are members of CITES.

“The danger is that those countries (who are potential buyers) should also pull out (of CITES) so that they both illegally trade, and such will have implications on the credibility of the state.

“Countries should have other ways of making money, whereby they can go through issues of quantifying their carbon sale. We believe that they can get something larger than what they are advocating for in the sale of ivory at a price that is unapproved.

“Most of these countries have issues with their economies so they are hoping that if they sell, some of the money will go into conservation and addressing human-wildlife conflicts, but they have not told us how they want to use the money in a way that’s transparent and convincing apart from saying they want to sell.”

Fulton Mangwanya, Zimbabwe National Parks and Wildlife Management Authority (Zimparks) Director General, insisted that ivory was undervalued on the international market.

“The value of a kilogramme is usually US$15,000, (£11,900). I don’t know the values that others have, but irrespective of that figure I am talking about, all we are saying is we want to unlock the value of that same stock-pile we have,” Mangwanya told VicFallsLive at the conference.

“We want to eat what we should, so this is what we are pushing especially after Covid-19 which has ravaged everything, and the revenue streams are dry.

“So the best we can do is to leverage on the stockpiles that we have because they have so much value in the markets.”

He said there were countries that were ready to buy Zimbabwe’s ivory.

“If the ban is lifted Asian countries are actually interested in our ivory,” Mangwanya added, without naming which countries he was referring to.

“So it is not a matter of marketing because they are still on and they are still trading in ivory locally, and they are getting all these imports from poachers who are into trafficking because to them, it’s a cultural industry that can never be closed.

“It’s not a secret that the market is still there and we are only being blocked by CITES.”

One Kenya-based conservation source highlighted that China closed its market on the order of its central government, not because of CITES.

“It is a major distraction from the real issues of conservation finance to suggest ivory can be sold again,” he said. “China will not open its markets again, so any sale is only going to finance the illicit trade that spurred the poaching surge a decade ago.”

Zimbabwe says its elephant population has become unsustainable because of good conservation programmes.

Southern African countries have in recent years seen their elephant populations grow significantly and they are now home to about 70 percent of Africa’s elephants.

Zimbabwe is estimated to be home to 100,000 elephants, the second highest population after Botswana, and the wildlife authorities say the figure is double what the country’s game reserves can hold.

Zimparks says the elephant population explosion is also fuelling human-wildlife conflict.

Zimbabwe last month said 64 people were killed by wild animals since the beginning of the year.

Mangwanya said with more money to fund conservation, the country would be able to prevent deaths from such conflicts.

“Whichever figure comes with the same funds; we want to unlock the value so that we use the funds to improve the livelihoods of the 55 districts of communities who are living with wild animals,” he said.

“Countries without species like elephants should not comment about it as long as they are not directly affected because these are issues that we are trying to put across, and we expect the same to be accepted at CITES if we don’t have unnecessary opposition from our brother and sisters’ African states.”

A bloc of 28 African countries including Kenya, Gabon, and most West and Central African countries oppose proposals to lift the ban on ivory trade, which they fear would encourage more poaching.

A group of 50 anti-ivory trade organisations warned that opening the ivory market would pose a serious danger to the African herd.

“The conference is sending a dangerous signal to poachers and criminal syndicates that elephants are mere commodities and that ivory trade could be resumed, heightening the threat to the species,” the groups said.

This article is reproduced here as part of the African Conservation Journalism Programme, funded in Angola, Botswana, Mozambique, and Zimbabwe by USAID’s VukaNow: Activity. Implemented by the international conservation organization Space for Giants, it aims to expand the reach of conservation and environmental journalism in Africa, and bring more African voices into the international conservation debate. Written articles from the Mozambican and Angolan cohorts are translated from Portuguese. Broadcast stories remain in the original language.

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