GTM-MQ7V62M G-7VKMD97QLF Human-Elephant Conflict a Threat to Elephant’s Survival, say African Range States
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  • Writer's pictureEPI Secretariat

Human-Elephant Conflict a Threat to Elephant’s Survival, say African Range States

Updated: Dec 21, 2022


EPI Council of Ministers Meeting attendees.

African countries belonging to the Elephant Protection Initiative (EPI) have met on the side-lines of the UN Biodiversity Conference in Montreal and adopted a powerful statement on the growing challenge of human-elephant conflict (HEC), which they say is ‘fast emerging as the greatest threat to the survival of Africa’s elephants’.


The EPI statement says that as human populations and economies grow, and competition for land and water increases, ‘HEC results in injuries and the tragic loss of human life, the destruction of crops and infrastructure, the loss of livelihoods and the killing of elephants in retaliation. If we cannot resolve these conflicts, we risk losing support for conservation amongst the people who live within or around our protected areas.’


Angola's Minister of the Environment, Ana Paula de Carvalho.

Angola’s Minister of the Environment, Ana Paula de Carvalho, who chaired the meeting, said, ‘We must convince the rest of the world of the severity of the challenge posed by human-elephant conflict.’


The EPI is an alliance of African countries with common policies on elephant conservation. It was founded in 2014 by Botswana, Chad, Ethiopia, Gabon and Tanzania, and now includes a majority of elephant range states. Earlier this month Niger became the 22nd country to join the EPI.


Greta Iori, Miguel Kinavuidi, Angola’s Minister of the Environment Ana Paula de Carvalho and John Scanlon AO.

Greta Iori, Director of Programme Development for the EPI’s secretariat, the EPI Foundation, said ‘this statement on HEC is a small but critical step in showing we must do things differently going forward.’


John Scanlon AO, CEO of the EPI Foundation, said, ‘Ivory poaching, while still a problem in Africa, is thankfully reduced. The international community should understand the changing nature of Africa’s conservation challenges and reflect them in the Post-2020 Global Biodiversity Framework, which is being negotiated here in Montreal. African countries which preserve elephants and their habitats are thereby protecting a wide range of biodiversity and mitigating climate change, and deserve international support.’


World Bank’s Global Director for Environment, Valerie Hickey (left) and CEO and Chairperson of the Global Environment Facility (GEF), Carlos Manuel Rodriguez (right).


Attendees at the meeting also included the CEO and Chairperson of the Global Environment Facility (GEF), Carlos Manuel Rodriguez, the World Bank’s Global Director for Environment, Valerie Hickey, and Conservation International’s Senior Vice President Suzanne Ngo-Eyok, who spoke of access to finance to conserve elephant populations.


Hon. Lee White CBE, Minister of Forests, Oceans, Environment and Climate Change, Gabon.

For more information, comment, interview opportunities with our team in Montreal contact the EPI Foundation’s Director of Communications, Barnaby Phillips


Watch 'The EPI; saving Africa’s elephants, building a better future for its people' here.

Read the Joint Statement on Human-Elephant Conflict below.

20221220 - EPIF - CBD CoP15 - Council of Ministers - Joint Statement on HEC - English
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