Can Elephants Survive a Legal Ivory Trade? Debate Is Shifting Against It
Stirring renewed debate, a respected conservationist says that corruption makes a legal ivory trade unworkable.
Photograph by Karel Prinsloo, AP
Published August 29, 2014
It's one of the more incendiary questions discussed in wildlife
conservation circles: Should there be a legal trade in elephant ivory?
This debate has been waxing and waning since at least 1989, when the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species (CITES) voted to "ban" the international trade in ivory after a ferocious wave of poaching in Africa that left hundreds of thousands of elephants butchered.
Some conservationists say that a limited legal ivory trade
is needed to satiate demand, especially in China, in a controlled
manner.
Many others argue that the 1989 ban must be kept in place
to protect elephants, especially now that poaching has once again risen
to catastrophic levels. One hundred thousand elephants were slaughtered from 2010 through 2012, according to a study published in the August 19 issue of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. A legal trade, they say, would only lead to even greater demand for ivory.
Elizabeth Bennett, a longtime conservationist and vice president for species conservation at the Wildlife Conservation Society (WCS), says it has become clear that it is impossible to have a controlled trade in elephant ivory.
That was her conclusion in a recent essay she wrote in the scientific journal Conservation Biology.
In an interview, Bennett says she examined the prospect for a legal
market in ivory and concluded that because corruption in some countries
among certain government officials is so pervasive, "it can't be done."
The corruption, Bennett wrote, is specifically "among
government officials charged with implementing wildlife-related
legislation." These corrupt activities include "officials demanding
bribes for compliance ... and accepting bribes to overlook illegal
activities," or "to switch or alter CITES or other permits along the
trade chain so that, through fraudulent paperwork, an illegal item seems
legal."
In an interview, Bennett says she wrote the piece for two
reasons: "We had a great increase in the poaching of elephants and data
showing the effect of poaching. And then we also still had countries
advocating for mechanisms to trade in ivory."
These countries, she says, include South Africa, which will host
the next CITES conference in 2016, and China. Bennett's study notes
that the global illegal trade in ivory has doubled since 2007.
Why is corruption rife? "There are two components to why
the corruption happens: poorly paid officials and highly financed
criminal networks," Bennett says. "That's a bad combination."
The overarching problem is that "once illegal ivory has
entered the legal trade, it's difficult or impossible for enforcement
officers to know what's legal and illegal."
Cleaning up corruption throughout an ivory trade network
that permeates countries across the globe would take decades. At current
poaching levels, the African elephant doesn't have that kind of time.
It is unclear how many elephants are left in Africa. A 2007 report gave a range of 472,000 to 690,000, but the actual number may well be as low as 250,000.
Photograph by Brent Stirton, Getty Images/National Geographic
Not Quite a Global Trade Ban
Other flashpoints of discussion have been ignited by
CITES-approved ivory auctions, called "one-off ivory sales." The sales,
in which stockpiled ivory was auctioned to designated trading partners,
took place in 1999 and 2008.
In the first sale, ivory from Botswana, Namibia, and
Zimbabwe was auctioned to Japan. The sale, according to CITES,
represented 5,446 tusks and earned $5 million, which was used for
"elephant conservation activities."
In the second sale, ivory from those countries and South Africa was sold to accredited
Chinese and Japanese traders. "Over 15 million USD for
African elephant conservation and local communities have been raised
through the sales of 102 tonnes of stockpiled ivory," according to a CITES press release.
To some conservationists, these sales were disastrous,
spurring the current poaching frenzy by keeping the markets active,
confusing consumers as to what was legal versus illegal ivory, and
offering a loophole for laundering illegal ivory into markets. To
others, the correlation is unproven.
VIRGINIA W. MASON, NG STAFF
SOURCES: WILDLIFE CONSERVATION SOCIETY; C4ADS;
AFRICAN ELEPHANT SPECIALIST GROUP, IUCN; NATIONAL GEOSPATIAL
INTELLIGENCE AGENCY; EC JOINT RESEARCH CENTRE
The World Wildlife Fund (WWF), for example, supported the 2008 sale.
Bennett says the WCS took no official stand. "We were more open-minded
about a legal trade until the last three or four years," she says. "But
the levels of corruption now prove we cannot control the trade."
Debate in the U.S.
Bennett's paper was released in the midst of a debate in
the U.S. about its own domestic ivory trade. In February, the Obama
administration announced its National Strategy for Combating Wildlife Trafficking, which was created to address "the global wildlife trafficking crisis."
In addition, the White House announced a ban on the commercial trade of elephant ivory—on
"imports, exports and domestic sale of ivory, with a very limited
number of exceptions." The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (FWS) is working to implement the ban.
The ban has been unwelcome to some, including the National Rifle Association
(NRA), the U.S.'s most powerful gun lobby. The NRA calls the ban on
ivory an "overreach of authority" and problematic because "any firearm,
firearm accessory, or knife that contains ivory, no matter how big or
small, would not be able to be sold in the United States, unless it is
more than 100 years old."
Trophy hunters are still allowed to hunt elephants in
Africa for their parts, but the ban sets limits on the number of
trophies that can be imported. The NRA also protests the ban because of
those limits. (See: "Controversy Swirls Around the Recent U.S. Suspension of Sport-Hunted Elephant Trophies.")
In July, Republican Senator Lamar Alexander of Tennessee introduced a bill into the Senate called the Lawful Ivory Protection Act of 2014; Republican Representative Steve Daines of Montana introduced the same bill to the House of Representatives. These bills have the support of the NRA
because they "protect firearms owners and sportsmen from a federal ban
on the sale and trade of objects containing lawfully-imported elephant
ivory." (Both bills have been forwarded to committees.)
Meanwhile, New York and New Jersey recently passed state bans on selling or importing ivory.
Colman O Criodain, the wildlife trade policy analyst at the
WWF, says his organization mostly agrees with Bennett that any legal
trade should be stopped.
Photograph by Brent Stirton, Getty Images/National Geographic
O Criodain admits that the 2008 one-off sale "didn't work
out the way we at WWF expected. So we wouldn't automatically endorse a
future ivory trade regime." The FWS notes on its website,
"Today, given the current poaching crisis and the scale of illegal
trade, it's unlikely that the United States would be able to support a
one-off sale."
O Criodain says the problem with the 2008 sale is that
China's government controlled the purchase of the ivory, releasing it
into the trade at an inflated price. This encouraged carvers to source
their ivory illegally.
In addition, the number of retail outlets permitted to sell
ivory increased without a commensurate increase in enforcement effort.
This led to abuses—illegal outlets operating without permits and
accredited outlets mixing illegal ivory with legal.
In theory, O Criodain says, there could be a legal
international trade in ivory, "but in practice it's very difficult, and
we've seen from the experience of the one-off sales it's proven
difficult to manage." He believes that any efforts by countries like
South Africa to launch a trade—if it chooses to at the next CITES
conference—wouldn't have a "hope in hell."
Plus, "if there were to be further sales," O Criodain says,
"we'd have to impose even more conditions on the purchasing countries
in order to be reassured beyond reasonable doubt that the sale might not
facilitate laundering of illegal ivory. And some countries might take
the view that we're being overly prescriptive. So I have doubts about
the practicalities of another one-off sale."
But, he adds, "the issue isn't as simple as legal versus
illegal. Most of what is being transited is illegal. The reason some
organizations now want the legal ivory trade—including antique
ivory—curtailed is that they see it as a risk for laundering new ivory.
And they believe if Western countries—like the U.S.—give up their ivory
trade, it would put pressure on Thailand and China to do the same."
(Thailand is currently under fire by CITES for operating as both a transit country and for its unregulated domestic ivory market.)
From left to right: Photographs by Brent Stirton,
Getty Images/National Geographic; Joe Amon, The Denver Post/Getty; Doug
Pensinger, Getty; Bobby Yip, Reuters
Trade Watchdog
One of the most aggressive groups monitoring the illegal trade in ivory is the London-headquartered Environmental Investigation Agency (EIA).
"Looking back 25 years, EIA has done more investigations
into the illegal ivory trade than any other group in the world," says
Allan Thornton, the organization's cofounder.
In 2010, Tanzania and Zambia submitted proposals to CITES
to sell their ivory stockpiles by downlisting their elephants from
Appendix I (maximum protection) to Appendix II (lesser protection).
EIA's undercover work, written up in a report, "Open Season: The Burgeoning Illegal Ivory Trade in Tanzania and Zambia,"
provided strong evidence of an illegal ivory trade between Zambia and
China and played a significant role in the defeat of Zambia's proposal.
EIA lobbied against the one-off sales in 1999 and 2008.
"All evidence," Thornton says, "shows ivory trade is incompatible with
the conservation of elephants."
He believes that bans on trade can reverse a poaching
trend. "In the run-up to the 1989 ban, pro-trade groups said that it
won't work, and literally within a few months of it passing, the global
ivory trade collapsed. Poaching dropped overnight."
Thornton added, "I've been doing environmental work for 38
years. I've never seen such an abrupt change in any environmental issue I
worked on."
The 1989 CITES global trade ban was "dismantled" by the
one-off sales, which "substantially compromised its integrity,
effectiveness, and enforceability," he argues.
"Japan is back in the ivory business. China has probably
taken the market that the EU and the U.S. once had. The trade is back.
There's a legal trade that helps the illegal trade to happen on an
industrial scale. All the permits and tricks are still there. And this
is the crux of everything: What's happening now is what was happening in
1988."
Photograph by Brent Stirton, Getty Images/National Geographic
Corruption Not the Main Culprit
Phyllis Lee, chair of the Scientific Advisory Committee for the Amboseli Trust for Elephants, in Kenya, agrees with Bennett that corruption is a problem in the ivory trade.
"[Bennett's] sensible arguments are in part based on what's
known about why trade in wildlife so often results in extinction
scenarios. Corruption is a problem that enables illegal
activities—poaching, transport of contraband, transborder shipment of
contraband—and the current trade in ivory is primarily illegal."
But, Lee adds, "corruption merely contributes to the lack of policing of others' extractive actions on a so-called resource."
Take whaling, she says. Some whale species have been
brought to the edge of extinction because of the lack of international
controls on hunting quotas and poor policing of the seas—not necessarily
because of corruption.
Furthermore, agreement on the best policies to avoid
extinctions don't even exist in conservation circles. "That's CITES's
job," Lee says, implying its failure.
When asked why, after all these years, wildlife
organizations and trade nations still haven't reached a consensus about
how to protect elephants, Lee answers bluntly: "Greed. Self-interest.
And a lack of the ethical appreciation and understanding of elephants."
A Pro-Trade "Outlier"
According to Bennett, the trade debate in the conservation
community is becoming "more one-sided" against allowing a trade. But
there are those who communicate a pro-trade stance.
Daniel Stiles, who lives in Kenya and has long studied the
ivory trade markets in Asia and Africa, is a member of the International
Union for Conservation of Nature's African Elephant Specialist Group (AfESG). The group provides CITES with scientific information.
Stiles says that his opinions don't necessarily reflect
those of the AfESG, and he acknowledges that he's now considered an
"outlier" for his pro-trade stance.
Stiles maintains that wildlife conservation organizations
often—wrongly—advocate against a regulated raw ivory trade because those
groups are often made up of "zoologists or scientists studying
elephants who don't understand how trade systems work."
He adds, "They don't understand the basic economic
principles of supply and demand. When demand for a scarce, valuable
commodity is high, the worst thing one can do is shut off supply. That
makes the commodity soar in value. In the case of ivory, this has been
disastrous for elephants."
Stiles, who's trained as an anthropologist, supports an
international ban on worked ivory, but he advocates for a limited legal
trade with China in raw ivory. (He also believes the domestic trade in
some countries, such as Thailand, should be shut down.)
Photograph by Ben Curtis, AP
He says that there's a difference between China's raw ivory
market and the worked ivory market: The two have different buyers,
trade chains, and demand drivers.
With worked ivory, Stiles says, "the buyers are consumers,
at the end of the trade chain. They buy ivory to give as gifts, for
esthetics, culture, or social prestige."
He says the problem is that most of the worked ivory in
China "is probably derived from poached elephants, and almost all of the
worked ivory in Southeast Asia is illegal."
According to Stiles, a successful legal trade would mean
that the worked ivory consumers buy would be derived from a legal
source.
In Stiles's opinion, a successful legal raw ivory trade
would look like this: The ivory would come from closely monitored
African ivory stockpiles. The tusks in those piles would come from
elephants who died naturally or were shot because they were "problem
animals." (He's opposed to culling wild elephants to augment
stockpiles.) That ivory would be sent directly to purchasers in China.
The ivory would get to China not via another one-off sale
(he says the last one has "caused a real mess"), but "through annual or
semiannual auctions. I think if 50 tons of legal ivory could be supplied
to China annually, the poaching rates would crash."
He also believes that a robust supply of legal ivory would
eliminate ivory speculators, who he thinks have been driving the
increased poaching since 2007. (See: "A Young Chinese Conservationist Discusses His Country's Role in the Ivory Trade.")
"Prices have shot up so much since 2008, when CITES shut
off any chance of more legal ivory, that speculators have started
stockpiling tusks to sell at a later date at great profit. They are
assuming that no legal ivory will appear on the market and that ivory
will continue to get scarcer (poaching and stockpile destruction), thus
driving the price of ivory ever higher. I believe it is the speculator
that is driving the increased poaching since 2007-8," he wrote in an
email.
Stiles concludes: "The only reason I don't agree with
closing the market in China is because a very large, well-established
black market is in operation. So if a ban is implemented, it won't
affect the black market—and might even make it grow."
Bryan Christy, author of National Geographic magazine's October 2012 "Ivory Worship"
story, responds: "This is exactly what was argued to allow the 2008
ivory sale to China and Japan. The result has not been a well-regulated
international ivory market. The result has been record killing of
elephants."
Christy cites a recent Chinese criminal conviction of a
government-authorized ivory dealer who smuggled more than seven tons of
ivory through his shop to discredit the notion that legal and illegal
ivory markets don't mix.
"Ivory is a fungible good," Christy says. "Imagine saying,
'The cocaine in this pile will be legal—the cocaine over here is not.'"
Photograph by Jia daitengfei, Imaginechina/AP
"No Good Reason Why Anyone Needs Ivory"
Beth Allgood
is among the many conservationists who disagree with Stiles. Allgood is
the U.S. campaigns director for the International Fund for Animal
Welfare (IFAW), which is lobbying for closure of the U.S. domestic ivory
trade (with some very specific exemptions).
"Bennett's article clearly points out that poaching cannot
be stopped in a corrupt world," Allgood says. "Trafficking cannot be
stopped in a corrupt world, and buying cannot be stopped in a corrupt
world." In her opinion, Bennett's essay slams the door shut on a viable
legal ivory trade.
IFAW is an organization that promotes both the protection of a species and the welfare of individual animals.
So it's not surprising that a moral note sounds through
Allgood's further argument: "Even if an international trade were
sustainable, it doesn't mean it should take place. Ivory comes from a
living, breathing being. You can't trade ivory as a commodity and not
hurt an elephant. You can't make it in a factory. It's not like making
widgets."
Moreover, "ivory isn't used for anything but art or
ornaments. There's nothing that ivory is used for today that can't be
replaced with something else," Allgood notes.
"In fact, there's no good reason why anyone needs ivory," she declares, "except elephants."
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