Endangered species are paying the price of Covid-19
Skip to main content
  • Home
  • Economy
  • Stocks
  • Analysis
  • World+Biz
  • Sports
  • Features
  • Epaper
  • More
    • Subscribe
    • COVID-19
    • Bangladesh
    • Splash
    • Videos
    • Games
    • Long Read
    • Infograph
    • Interviews
    • Offbeat
    • Thoughts
    • Podcast
    • Quiz
    • Tech
    • Archive
    • Trial By Trivia
    • Magazine
    • Supplement
  • বাংলা
The Business Standard

Saturday
August 13, 2022

Sign In
Subscribe
  • Home
  • Economy
  • Stocks
  • Analysis
  • World+Biz
  • Sports
  • Features
  • Epaper
  • More
    • Subscribe
    • COVID-19
    • Bangladesh
    • Splash
    • Videos
    • Games
    • Long Read
    • Infograph
    • Interviews
    • Offbeat
    • Thoughts
    • Podcast
    • Quiz
    • Tech
    • Archive
    • Trial By Trivia
    • Magazine
    • Supplement
  • বাংলা
SATURDAY, AUGUST 13, 2022
Endangered species are paying the price of Covid-19

Thoughts

Lindsey Kennedy and Nathan Paul Southern, Foreign Policy
13 July, 2021, 10:10 am
Last modified: 13 July, 2021, 10:27 am

Related News

  • Hacker offers to sell data of 48.5 mln users of Shanghai's Covid app
  • Delhi to enforce mask mandate again after spurt in Covid cases
  • US CDC no longer recommends students quarantine for Covid-19 exposure
  • Flush with wins, finally Covid-free, Biden to hit the road ahead of US midterms
  • Global Covid deaths drop by 9%, Omicron subvariant BA.5 remains dominant: WHO

Endangered species are paying the price of Covid-19

Diminishing tourism has created new incentives for the illegal wildlife trade

Lindsey Kennedy and Nathan Paul Southern, Foreign Policy
13 July, 2021, 10:10 am
Last modified: 13 July, 2021, 10:27 am
Lindsey Kennedy, journalist and Nathan Paul Southern, investigative reporter. Sketch/TBS
Lindsey Kennedy, journalist and Nathan Paul Southern, investigative reporter. Sketch/TBS

The table we're writing on is made of rosewood, the most trafficked wildlife product in the world. For months, we've been researching the uptick in logging and poaching, which are gradually emptying out the forests here in Cambodia as well as neighboring Vietnam, Laos, Thailand, and Myanmar. Rosewood trafficking is a brutal business closely interwoven with drug smuggling as evidenced by a bust on the home of now-deceased drug kingpin Sathit Wiyaporn in October, where Bangkok police found 160 million baht ($4.9 million) worth of rosewood planks. Rangers who stand in the way of illegal operations frequently turn up murdered.

Most of the rosewood trade is destined for China, where it sells for up to $100,000 per cubic meter, but plenty winds up in homes across Southeast Asia. Or right here, under our noses, at this Western-owned restaurant in Kampot, a riverside backpacker trail town popular with stoners and yoga aficionados. "Did you know this is a protected species?" we asked, astounded. The owner shrugged self-consciously. "I know, I know," she said, exhaling a plume of weed smoke. "But look at the quality. It's a beautiful piece of wood."

The trade of illegal wildlife products is everywhere, but the pandemic offered a brief opportunity to crack down. Closed borders and temporary lockdowns offered a chance to implement environmental protections while drastically curbing cross-border flows of wildlife trafficking and illegal logging. Spooked by the probable link between the wildlife trade and Covid-19, China briefly suspended the buying and selling of wild animals and introduced a list of more than 900 protected species, including pangolins and pandas, with hunters and traffickers now facing fines and prison time. Since the start of the Covid-19 crisis, global seizures of pangolin scales, ivory, and rhino horns have dropped by one-fifth. Reduced tourist footfall and a temporary reduction in emissions were good news for at-risk animals, plants, forests, and threatened biodiversity.

But the economic fallout of these measures also fostered the conditions that fuel poaching, logging, and environmental destruction in the first place. Poaching and wildlife trafficking flourish in times of economic hardship, when communities living in close proximity to endangered species are left with few alternative sources of income. For many of them, tourism offered an alternative—but the unexpected and devastating impact of the pandemic pushed communities that rely on tourists deeper into poverty.

"The tourist sector literally closed down overnight," said Tim Davenport of the Wildlife Conservation Society in Tanzania. "There's no revenue for governments. No revenue for NGOs. No revenue for the wildlife authorities."

Would-be poachers of elephant ivory and rhino horns need to weigh the risks and rewards, Davenport said. Pre-pandemic, a combination of falling prices and rising enforcement skewed the ratio in conservationists' favor. Cross-border trafficking of wildlife products might still be tricky, but pandemic-related budget cuts, dwindling financial support for conservation efforts from foreign aid donors, and temporary suspensions of local enforcement efforts mean poaching itself has become less dangerous—and thus, more attractive.

"Poaching hasn't stopped," warned Susan Lieberman, vice president of international policy at the Wildlife Conservation Society. "And ivory can be stockpiled. I mean, it'll last forever, right?"

For communities on the edges of wildlife-rich forests, exploiting these resources is increasingly a matter of survival. Hard-hit governments as well as militants and organised crime groups are becoming financially desperate too and more likely to tear through their natural assets for quick cash.

Both Kenya and Cambodia have seen significant rises in bushmeat poaching, said Alastair Nelson, a senior fellow at the Global Initiative Against Transnational Organised Crime. Nelson believes the use of wildlife products in traditional medicine may also be increasing. During times of economic hardship, people who can't afford Western medicine turn to alternatives that are often based on animal and plant species, he explained. It doesn't help that, in March 2020, China's National Health Commission began aggressively promoting a range of traditional Chinese medicines—including bear bile injections—as Covid-19 treatments while donating unproven herbal remedies to low-income countries, including Cambodia. Meanwhile, in Cambodia's densely forested highland province of Mondulkiri, where health care access is severely lacking, one nonprofit worker told us many people were (justifiably) so petrified of catching Covid-19 that they resorted to trapping wild animals in the forest for food rather than risking a trip to the market.

This isn't only an ecological disaster in the making; it may also lead to another pandemic. Close contact between humans and wild animals creates the conditions needed for new zoonotic (cross-species) diseases like Covid-19, Ebola, severe acute respiratory syndrome, and bird flu to emerge in the first place. The World Health Organisation estimates 60 percent of all known infectious diseases and 75 percent of emerging infectious agents are zoonotic. The more humans poach, log, trade, and consume wildlife, the greater the risk becomes.

"When you start to degrade that interface between people and nature, you have the risk of increased spillover of what could become pandemic diseases," said Ginette Hemley, senior vice president of wildlife conservation at the World Wildlife Fund. "So we hope that this experience can enlighten policymakers to understand the need for conservation on a grander scale."

So far, there's little sign of that. As revenues from ecotourism collapsed amid the pandemic, at least 22 countries enacted or proposed cuts to conservation efforts. Meanwhile, third-sector funding has reduced drastically. A survey of international development nonprofits by the U.K.-based Bond Group in January found every respondent had taken a hit to their usual income streams, with a fifth of nonprofits facing the prospect either of reducing the number of countries they operate in or closing altogether.

Part of an estimated 105 tonnes of ivory and a tonne of rhino horn confiscated from poachers is being burnt in Nairobi, Kenya. PHOTO: REUTERS
Part of an estimated 105 tonnes of ivory and a tonne of rhino horn confiscated from poachers is being burnt in Nairobi, Kenya. PHOTO: REUTERS

Covid-19 restrictions also prevent nonprofits, international monitors, and rangers from carrying out vital front-line work, making them powerless to stop the onslaught of poaching and logging. According to the International Journal of Protected Areas and Conservation, more than half of Africa's and a quarter of Asia's protected areas have been forced to halt or reduce conservation actions, such as anti-poaching patrols. Globally, around 1 in 5 park rangers have lost their jobs.

Conservationists warn weakened enforcement and monitoring have also given illegal mining as well as agricultural and deforestation operations the chance to expand unchallenged, accelerating the deforestation of protected areas in Cambodia, Brazil, and Colombia.

"With governments on lockdown, customs are also on lockdown, and it's hard for them to patrol and gather intelligence," Lieberman said. "Traffickers have not gone away."

In some areas, that seems to be the goal. As a recent report by the Global Initiative Against Transnational Organised Crime noted, not only is Cambodia's illegal logging trade thriving, but a number of powerful oknhas ("lords") are implicated in it. Oknhas are Cambodian business tycoons who pay upward of $500,000 to be awarded the honorific title by the government, roughly equivalent to a British knighthood. Corrupt oknhas and government officials involved in the highly profitable logging trade appear to be capitalising on the pandemic by using Covid-19 as an excuse to restrict monitors' access to protected areas.

"The government has been stopping us from patrolling from February 2020 until now," said a spokesperson for the Prey Lang Community Network (PLCN), a group of local community members working to save Cambodia's Prey Lang forest from illegal logging—mostly rosewood. As the authorities prioritise crackdowns on conservationists over criminals, even arresting some of the PLCN team for investigating, illegal logging is free to flourish, they explained. In fact, the PLCN said even with its activities curtailed, the group has detected a 20 percent increase in logging since 2020. "It's a good time for all traders of wildlife and timber," the spokesperson warned.

Those typically shouldering the direct risks of actually poaching and logging in Prey Lang aren't only the poorest in the community, but they're also the ones who stand to benefit the least. They see the smallest cut of the spoils while decimating their most precious natural resource. That's a pattern that repeats elsewhere in the world.

"The local people who do the poaching are not the ones who are making a lot of money here. It's the middlemen, dealers, the traffickers, the syndicates," Lieberman insisted. "But local people will poach if they're hungry, if they need to sell more, if they can't support their families."

Worse, these vulnerable communities are at a dire risk of being overrun by dangerous criminal groups. According to the World Wildlife Fund, wildlife trafficking is the fourth biggest illegal industry in the world, generating up to $26 billion per year.

"States need to understand that this isn't only about conserving; this really is about serious organised crime," said Jorge Eduardo Rios, chief of the wildlife/forest crime program at the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime. "It's a security issue because this money is being made. It's going somewhere."

Adding to the danger, areas that rely on conservation funding and ecotourism are often located in politically volatile areas used by transnational organised crime groups, militias, and even terrorist organisations, Nelson warned.

Take Virunga National Park, home to one-third of the world's remaining wild mountain gorillas. Virunga is situated in the eastern Democratic Republic of the Congo, where more than 130 armed groups are at war with one another. Or Boni National Reserve in northeast Kenya, home to elephants, hippos, hyenas, and yellow baboons—and previously a base for al-Shabab to recruit fresh militants from desperate communities in the area. Quirimbas National Park, a UNESCO biosphere reserve, hosts 160 species of animals, including turtles, humpback whales, and dolphins. It's also in the heart of Cabo Delgado Province in Mozambique, home to an ongoing Islamic State-linked insurgency.

"Funding for conservation is critical because things are breaking apart in these remote and border areas," Nelson said, stressing that conservation groups working with the authorities provide a "long-term anchor" of governance and rule of law.

"Anti-poaching efforts and initiatives to tackle and prevent the activities of armed groups are vital for stability," agreed Joel Wengamulay, director of communications at Virunga National Park, where six park rangers were killed in an ambush earlier this year.

Wengamulay warned the loss of ecotourism has dealt a devastating blow to the eastern DRC's economy and population, which are direct beneficiaries of the tourism industry. Less money is being spent in the area, he said, creating financial strain at the same time as pandemic-related price inflation drives up food costs.

"Eastern Congo is an area that has been beset by conflict for several decades, and what people really require is stability and peace," Wengamulay said. "They need to be able to earn a decent living and escape the dire poverty that the vast majority of people endure."

But the tourism industry is still in limbo. For now, armed groups in eastern DRC are one of the few employers in town—just as illegal loggers are in Prey Lang, Cambodia. Around the world, out-of-work rangers and guides are left with few options but to exploit their knowledge of the forests they once preserved for wildlife traffickers and organised crime groups. And the trafficking of endangered species, destined for China and its neighboring countries—to which buyers can once again travel to make their purchases—has resumed. In January, an enormous haul of tusks, bones, and scales estimated to be from more than 10,000 pangolins, 709 elephants, and 11 lions was seized en route from Nigeria to Vietnam.

Unless international investment in conservation becomes a serious priority—and fast—the damage to biodiversity, dependent communities, the stability of protected regions, and overarching efforts to fight climate change may never be reversed. And having survived one zoonotic outbreak that crippled the global economy, killing 4 million people and counting, we'll be hurtling rapidly toward the next one.


Lindsey Kennedy is a journalist and documentary filmmaker covering stories related to development, global security, and abuses of civil and human rights. She is the director of TePonui Media. Twitter: @LindsAKennedy


Nathan Paul Southern is an investigative reporter and security specialist. He covers non-traditional security threats, Chinese expansionism, organised crime, and terrorism. Twitter: @NathanPSouthern


Disclaimer: This article first appeared on foreignpolicy.com, and is published by special syndication arrangement.

Top News

endangered / Species / paying / Price / COVID-19

Comments

While most comments will be posted if they are on-topic and not abusive, moderation decisions are subjective. Published comments are readers’ own views and The Business Standard does not endorse any of the readers’ comments.

Top Stories

  • Ctg megaprojects get costlier from rising dollar, faulty plan
    Ctg megaprojects get costlier from rising dollar, faulty plan
  • Salman Rushdie. Photo: BBC
    Salman Rushdie may lose eye, is on ventilator, his agent says
  • Roundtable: Global energy crisis and challenges of Bangladesh
    Roundtable: Global energy crisis and challenges of Bangladesh

MOST VIEWED

  • Faruque Hassan. Sketch: TBS
    Connecting the dots for a sustainable growth 
  • Tanvir Hasan. Sketch: TBS
    Our obsession with dress codes and looking ‘decent’   
  • Can a country go bankrupt?
    Can a country go bankrupt?
  • Are we fighting a losing climate battle?
    Are we fighting a losing climate battle?
  • Therese Raphael. Sketch: TBS
    Why British conservatives went cold on Rishi Sunak
  • Rakib Al Hasan. Sketch: TBS
    The overlooked link between foreign currency reserve crisis and money laundering

Related News

  • Hacker offers to sell data of 48.5 mln users of Shanghai's Covid app
  • Delhi to enforce mask mandate again after spurt in Covid cases
  • US CDC no longer recommends students quarantine for Covid-19 exposure
  • Flush with wins, finally Covid-free, Biden to hit the road ahead of US midterms
  • Global Covid deaths drop by 9%, Omicron subvariant BA.5 remains dominant: WHO

Features

Toes and talons of Shikra. Photo; Enam Ul Haque

Shikra: A leopard with wings!

1h | Panorama
Photo: Noor-A-Alam

Around the world in 10 days: A chance to taste global cuisines

2h | Food
Lobbyists float ludicrous arguments to prevent tobacco control act amendment

Lobbyists float ludicrous arguments to prevent tobacco control act amendment

2h | Panorama
Will US-China tensions boil over?

Will US-China tensions boil over?

48m | Panorama

More Videos from TBS

Photo: TBS

Why you should update your Apple devices and ensure security

43m | Videos
Birds under increasing threat from plastic waste

Birds under increasing threat from plastic waste

1h | Videos
Rainwater no longer safe to drink anywhere on Earth

Rainwater no longer safe to drink anywhere on Earth

1h | Videos
The ship that was sunk to kill a journalist

The ship that was sunk to kill a journalist

17h | Videos

Most Read

1
Dollar crisis: BB orders removal of 6 banks’ treasury chiefs 
Banking

Dollar crisis: BB orders removal of 6 banks’ treasury chiefs 

2
Photo: Collected
Transport

Will Tokyo’s traffic model solve Dhaka’s gridlocks?

3
Diesel price hiked by Tk34 per litre, Octane by Tk46
Energy

Diesel price hiked by Tk34 per litre, Octane by Tk46

4
Representational Image. Photo: Collected
Bangladesh

Air passengers should plan extra commute time to airport: DMP

5
Arrest warrant against Habib Group chairman, 4 others 
Crime

Arrest warrant against Habib Group chairman, 4 others 

6
File Photo: State Minister for Power, Energy and Mineral Resources Nasrul Hamid
Energy

All factories to remain closed once a week under rationing system

EMAIL US
contact@tbsnews.net
FOLLOW US
WHATSAPP
+880 1847416158
The Business Standard
  • About Us
  • Contact us
  • Sitemap
  • Privacy Policy
  • Comment Policy
Copyright © 2022
The Business Standard All rights reserved
Technical Partner: RSI Lab

Contact Us

The Business Standard

Main Office -4/A, Eskaton Garden, Dhaka- 1000

Phone: +8801847 416158 - 59

Send Opinion articles to - oped.tbs@gmail.com

For advertisement- sales@tbsnews.net