This week’s big environmental stories, 9-15 September
In an effort to
promote conservation, individuals and companies in Chaozhou, Guangdong
province, can now file claims for damage to crops and other property caused by
wild animals.
Chaozhou’s forestry bureau has recently signed agreements with insurance
companies to offer products to insure against such damage, reported China Green Times.
According to the bureau, the objective is
to offer a safety net for possible damages that may otherwise prompt people to
hurt or kill wild animals in defence of property.
The city boasts 285 terrestrial species of wild animals, and crop damage by wild boars is
a particular headache. The bureau has also committed to conducting a
comprehensive wildlife survey in order to better protect these species.
Chaozhou’s initiative is the latest in a series of local government efforts to
ameliorate human–wildlife conflicts in different parts of the country. In 2021,
Guizhou province began to pilot a
compensation scheme for wildlife-induced damages. In July this year, Qinghai, a
province bordering Tibet, significantly raised the amount
of compensation available.
Red Star News reported recently
that increasing numbers of brown bears are intruding into the settlements of
Tibetan herders in the province, causing not only property damage but also
wounds and deaths in some cases.
According to a letter by the
National Forestry and Grassland Administration (NFGA), addressed to members of
the National People’s Congress, in 2021 nine provinces had come up with
compensation or insurance schemes for wildlife-caused damages.
In the letter, the NFGA attributes growing human–wildlife conflicts to the
general recovery of wild animal populations across the country. This it puts
down to stricter conservation measures, leading to the spread of animals such
as wild boars to territories populated by people.
Besides encouraging local governments to explore financing options to support
compensation schemes, the NFGA also vows to strengthen the monitoring of key
damage-causing species, improve the quality of wildlife habitats so animals
remains there, and adjust the spatial planning of agriculture and industry to
reduce the chance of wildlife coming into contact with humans.
(Sources: China Dialogue)
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