Is China finally crushing its ivory trade?

Author(s)

Patrick Bergin, South China Morning Post

Date Published
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Last Friday, the Chinese government destroyed 662kg of confiscated ivory in Beijing, a move that was largely symbolic but nevertheless a positive development for elephant conservation. Each time ivory is destroyed publicly, whether in Congo-Brazzaville or Colorado, the world’s attention is trained on the elephant crisis. When the event is orchestrated in a country such as China, the world’s largest ivory market, the message conveyed is significant.
 
The event last week, however, appeared to deliver more than symbolism when Zhao Shucong, head of the State Forestry Administration, made the following statement: “We will strictly control ivory processing and trade until the commercial processing and sale of ivory and its products are eventually halted.”
 
Could this mean a phasing out of China’s legal domestic ivory trade? Many of us in the conservation community are taking those words to mean as much. Certainly, over the past 18 months, Beijing has taken action to ensure its citizens are not complicit in the illicit ivory trade, which claims the lives of between 25,000 and 35,000 elephants in Africa annually. In January last year, the State Forestry Administration crushed more than 6 tonnes of ivory in Dongguan . Hong Kong began a phased destruction of its 30-tonne stockpile in May last year.
 
Last Thursday, a day before the Beijing ivory crush, the Beijing Capital International Airport’s customs office announced a campaign to discourage Chinese travellers from buying ivory abroad and bringing it home. A member of the customs’ anti-trafficking department noted that more than a tonne of ivory products had been confiscated at the airport since 2014, much of it smuggled from countries in Africa.
 
This perhaps explains the sudden one-year moratorium on carved ivory imports imposed by the State Forestry Administration in February. Given its small scope and temporal limitations, however, the moratorium will do nothing to restrain China’s thriving domestic ivory market or provide Africa’s elephants a reprieve from the poaching.
 
Allowing a legal ivory trade – even a strictly controlled one – to persist will always undermine conservation efforts on the ground, regardless of the number of official proclamations or symbolic events staged. That’s because the legal trade complicates law enforcement efforts by providing a convenient disguise for the illegal trade. It also serves to legitimise the ownership of an animal product in the name of art or for the purposes of financial speculation or “investment”. Shutting down the trade entirely would close the loophole often exploited by ivory traffickers and help establish a lasting taboo around owning a product obtained from a brutally murdered animal.
 
So a conservationist like myself might be forgiven for feeling some encouragement, even hope, by the message implicit in Zhao’s statement. If he intended his words to be interpreted in this way, I would ask his agency to lay out an explicit timeline for phasing out the country’s legal trade as a next step. Decisive action, more than words or symbolism, will make clear China’s intentions.
 
China’s citizens would seemingly also welcome a phase-out plan and timetable. Surveys conducted in mainland China and Hong Kong – a key destination and transit hub for illegal ivory – suggest there is considerable support for banning trade in ivory.
 
As the voices of Chinese citizens join the larger conservation chorus advocating greater protection of elephants, it is our greatest hope that Beijing’s intention is to take the ultimate step to end the elephant poaching crisis.
 
I am cautiously optimistic that mainland China and Hong Kong will do right by Africa’s elephants, and that their governments will determine that the future of a species is more important than the future of an industry that enriches a few while depriving a continent of its natural heritage. Zhao’s words appeared to suggest Beijing had finally reached that determination. Now I, and the rest of the world, will be watching to see whether my caution or my optimism was merited.
 
Dr Patrick Bergin is CEO of the African Wildlife Foundation