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Following a very successful and landmark LionAid conference on the conservation needs and status of African lions in Johannesburg on the … |
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The LionAid Conference on the conservation needs and status of African lions - Action Plans
Wednesday 25th April 2012
Following a very successful and landmark LionAid conference on the conservation needs and status of African lions in Johannesburg on the 29th and 30th March, we are delighted to now publish the Action Plans agreed by the delegates.
The Management and Scientific Authorities of seven African lion range States attended as follows:
We now very much look forward to working with all these African lion range States to initiate regional and pan-African lion conservation measures to halt current catastrophic population declines in this iconic species.
We would like to thank Defra and the UK Government for granting us the funds without preconditions to hold this conference.
LionAid has been asked develop National Lion Conservation Plans with all these lion range States. This places us in the responsible position of coordinating and facilitating overall lion conservation and management programmes, and we will soon proceed to responsibly address this remit.
ACTION PLANS
Categories: Biodiversity, lion conservation, sustainability |
Posted by Chris Macsween at 12:00
LionAid receives UK Government funding for African Lion Range State Conference
Wednesday 15th February 2012
LionAid is proud to announce that the UK Government (Defra) has provided funding for us to host a conference among African lion range states. The conference will ask delegates to present their latest updates to their national lion conservation plans, to provide non-detriment reports in case the range state allows commercial (trophy hunting) offtake, and to consider an uplisting of lions from CITES Appendix II to Appendix I. We have invited a diversity of African lion range states (Senegal, Cameroon, Nigeria, Namibia, South Africa, Botswana, Mozambique, Zambia, Tanzania, Kenya, Ethiopia, Uganda, Zimbabwe and Malawi) and the response to date has been wonderful. Eleven countries already confirmed attendance. The conference will be held in Johannesburg on March 29th and 30th, and in addition to the range states we expect a number of NGOs to attend. We aim not to have this conference to be a talk shop but rather a consequential and immediately implementable contribution to conservation of African lions. We will therefore invite representation from country Management Authorities (usually Ministries) and Scientific Authorities (Wildlife Departments and Universities). This will ensure relevance to national lion conservation priorities. What is most important is that African range states adopt the relevant measures to conserve an iconic species with local solutions.
Read the full Press Release here Picture Credit: Chris Harvey Categories: Biodiversity, lion conservation, lion trophy hunting, sustainability |
Posted by Pieter Kat at 16:04
Biodiversity and the European Community
Sunday 4th December 2011
![]() On May 3, 2011, the European Commission published a “Communication from the Commission to the European Parliament, the Council, the Economic and Social Committee and the Committee of the Regions” called (optimistically) “Our life insurance, our natural capital: an EU biodiversity strategy to 2020”.
It contains the usual folderol, but there is a very interesting section in “Target 6: Help avert global biodiversity loss”. Under Action 17 “Reduce indirect drivers of biodiversity loss”, the communication states “… the EU will take measures…to reduce the biodiversity impacts of EU consumption patterns, particularly for resources that have negative effects on biodiversity” -17a.
This would apply directly to the EU consumption of lion trophies, especially those from western and central Africa, where France is the major consumer. As explained before, these lions are genetically distinct from all other lions in Africa, are highly endangered, are losing populations at a great rate (locally extinct in Cote d’Ivoire, Ghana and Congo by 2010 surveys; Nigeria has 39 lions left, Cameroon, Burkina Faso, and Benin still allow trophy hunting despite greatly declining populations), and should be immediately be declared prohibited imports to the EU.
Also, the communication states “ The Commission will work with Member States and key stakeholders to provide the right market signals for biodiversity conservation, including work to reform, phase out, and eliminate harmful subsidies at both EU and Member State level, and to provide positive incentives for biodiversity conservation and sustainable use” – 17c.
This would, inter alia, hopefully provide a means of phasing out EU and UK subsidies for the Botswana beef industry that is greatly destructive of biodiversity in that country (see our blog on that matter here
We will be bringing this matter up when we meet with the Cabinet Member of the EC Commissioner for Environment on January 11, 2012.
Photo credit: David Dugmore |
Posted by Pieter Kat at 16:18




