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CITES
permits 60 tons of elephant ivory to be sold
Environmental
News Service (ENS)
June 04, 2007
http://www.ens-newswire.com/ens/jun2007/2007-06-04-01.asp
THE HAGUE, The Netherlands,
June 4, 2007 (ENS) - The Convention on International Trade in Endangered
Species, CITES, Saturday approved exports of 60 tons of elephant
ivory from Botswana, Namibia, and South Africa to Japan. The approval
comes over the objections of many African elephant range states
and conservation groups who say legal trade will give cover to ivory
poachers.
The CITES Standing Committee
approved the sales ahead of this week's triennial CITES conference,
which opened officially on Sunday.
In a related but separate
decision, the Standing Committee also decided that Japan has established
sufficiently strong domestic trade control systems to be granted
the status of trading partner allowed to import the approved ivory.
Botswana will be permitted
to sell 20 metric tons of ivory, Namibia will sell 10 tons, and
South Africa will sell 30 tons.
The stockpiles of ivory
to be sold were gathered from elephants that died as a result of
natural causes or were killed because they caused problems to human
beings.
The exports
from these three countries were agreed in principle in 2002 but
were made conditional on the establishment of up-to-date and comprehensive
baseline data on elephant poaching and population levels.
The CITES Standing Committee
determined that this condition has been satisfied and that the exports
may proceed.
"The CITES Secretariat
will closely supervise these new exports and monitor future trends
in elephant poaching and population levels throughout Africa,"
said CITES Secretary-General Willem Wijnstekers.
"By basing future
decisions on reliable field data, CITES can develop an approach
to elephant ivory that benefits states relying on elephants for
tourism as well as those seeking income from elephant products in
order to finance wildlife conservation," he said.
Botswana, Namibia, and
South Africa have committed to, and are required by CITES to use
the revenue derived from the sale exclusively for elephant conservation
and community development programmes.
"Although we agree
Japan has met the necessary requirements, we caution that the sale
should be closely monitored. This would include an annual report
to the CITES parties on levels of ivory going through the system
in Japan to ensure early detection of potential problems or trends,"
said Dr. Susan Lieberman, director of the WWF Global Species Programme.
But an investigative
report into Japan's domestic ivory trade controls released last
week by the International Fund for Animal Welfare details loopholes
in the Japanese system that allow illegal ivory from elephants poached
in the wild to be laundered in astronomical sums into the legal
domestic ivory market.
"This decision is
a disgrace in light of evidence that Japan clearly fails to meet
the bar set by the CITES framework for such sales," said Peter
Pueschel, program manager for IFAW's Protection of Wildlife from
Commercial Trade program.
"The Standing Committee
is disregarding this evidence just as it ignores that the 2.8 ton
seizure of contraband ivory in Osaka in August of last year as if
it never happened. This is slap in the face to CITES Parties who
comply with CITES obligations."
CITES banned the international
commercial ivory trade in 1989. Then, in 1997, recognizing that
some southern African elephant populations were healthy and well
managed, it permitted Botswana, Namibia and Zimbabwe to make a one-time
sale of ivory to Japan totalling 50 tons. This sale took place in
1999 and brought in US$5 million.
In 2004, requests by
several southern African States for annual ivory quotas were not
accepted by the Conference of the Parties to the Convention.
Today the elephant populations
of southern Africa are listed in Appendix II of the Convention,
which allows trade through a permit system, while all other elephant
populations are listed in Appendix I, which prohibits all imports
for commercial purposes.
The long-running global
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 sometimes dangerous animals, weighed
against concerns that such sales may increase poaching.
Between August 2005 and
August 2006, more than 26 metric tons of ivory were seized, and
customs officials estimate that 90 percent of contraband products
pass over borders undetected.
In May 2006,
Hong Kong customs officials seized 600 ivory tusks similar to the
ones pictured here, the largest ivory seizure in Hong Kong since
1989. Meanwhile, the price of ivory has skyrocketed in the past
decade, from US$500 per kilo in Japan in 1994 to its current record
price of US$850 per kilo.
Pueschel says the financial
incentive to poach is the driving force behind the slaughter of
at least 20,000 elephants annually, a situation that stands to impact
on the balance of local ecosystems and communities' ability to survive.
"Europe, and Germany
in particular given its seat as current EU President, must now take
responsibility for the inevitable increase in the killing of both
elephants and the humans charged to protect them," said Pueschel.
"They should now be prepared to cover the expenses of enhanced
enforcement that will be critical to responding to increases in
poaching."
On Sunday, the day after
the Standing Committee meeting, the 14th triennal Conference of
the Parties the CITES Convention opened in The Hague.
The meeting will continue
until June 15, and during that time delegates will consider 37 proposals
to amend the CITES appendices.
Proposals deal with limitations
on trade in elephants, cetaceans, Asian big cats, sharks and sturgeons.
There are proposals to
list marine species such as the porbeagle shark, the European eel,
and red and pink corals, as well as timber species such as cedar
and rosewood.
"These proposals
on lucrative marine and timber species mark a shift from purely
commercial interests to recognizing conservation concerns,"
said Dr. Sue Mainka, head of the delegation of the IUCN-World Conservation
Union to the CITES conference.
The IUCN publishes the
Red List of Threatened Species, considered the world's most comprehensive
inventory of the global conservation status of plant and animal
species.
"With growing recognition
that resources are decreasing, the big fish and timber industries
are faced with including conservation concerns in their calculations,"
Mainka said.
Pau Brasil, Caesalpinia
echinata, a slow growing wood species with striking blood-red heartwood
is the national tree of Brazil. Initially used as a source of dye,
it is now being harvested for manufacturing professional bows for
violins, violas, cellos and double-bases. A single violin bow is
estimated to cost up to US$5,000, using one kilogram (2.2 pounds)
of wood.
The country of Brazil
was named after the Caesalpinia echinata tree, commonly known in
Brazil as pau brasil. Research is now underway to determine if the
bark of this tree can be used to treat cancer.
International trade and
habitat loss have severely depleted this species, which is now found
only in the Brazilian Atlantic Coastal Forest, a forest area now
covering less than eight percent of its original extent.
Pau Brazil is listed
as Endangered on the IUCN Red List of Threatened Species.
Brazil's proposal to
include Pau Brazil in Appendix II of the CITES Convention would
mean that all its derivates including musical instruments would
become subject to CITES regulation, requiring musicians or orchestras
to travel with CITES permits when they go on trips abroad.
"This beautiful
timber is valued and used worldwide. No comparable substitute is
known for the making of bows for string instruments and therefore
demand is likely to remain high internationally," says Jane
Smart, Head of the IUCN Species Programme.
The
CITES Appendices
Appendix I -
Species that are the most endangered are listed on Appendix I. They
are threatened with extinction and CITES prohibits international
trade in specimens of these species except when the purpose of the
import is not commercial. In these exceptional cases, such as for
scientific research, trade may take place provided it is authorized
by the granting of both an import permit and an export permit.
Appendix II lists species
that are not necessarily now threatened with extinction but that
may become so unless trade is closely controlled.
Appendix III
is a list of species included at the request of a Party that already
regulates trade in the species and that needs the cooperation of
other countries to prevent unsustainable or illegal exploitation.
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