Opening concert of Annual Meeting 2025 in Davos-Klosters to address glacier melt in Antractica
The opening concert of the Annual Meeting 2025 in Davos-Klosters will address the pressing issues ...
The Lion’s Share announced that initial grants amounting to $400,000 – which are issued in partnership with the Small Grants Program of the Global Environment Facility (GEF) – will fund local projects in nine countries across Africa, Asia and Latin America to build resilience in communities in wildlife-rich areas and support protection of threatened wildlife in their last strongholds.
The Lion’s Share – an award-winning initiative led by the United Nations Development Program (UNDP) and a coalition of businesses and UN partners, that asks brands to contribute 0.5 percent of their media spend every time an animal image is featured in their advertisements.
The grants – which mark the first investments to come from the COVID-19 response of The Lion’s Share – are meant to support communities dependent on wildlife-based tourism – an industry that employs millions and is critical to wildlife conservation around the world, but one that has been devastated by the COVID-19 pandemic.
The first nine projects to be funded by The Lion’s Share’s COVID-19 response grants are Virtual Safaris, Permaculture Gardens & Elephant of Human Conflict Reducing Chili Fences in Namibia; Black Mambas: Bees, Permaculture, & Human-Elephant Conflict Reduction of South Africa; Sustainable Agriculture & Natural Medicinal Knowledge in the Amazon Rainforest of Ecuador; Sea Turtle Anti-Poaching Rangers, Community Livelihoods & Education of Sri Lanka; Fish Breeding Hub & Solar Horticulture of Zambia; Community Aquaponic Agriculture & Virtual Tourism of Bhutan; Cheese Production for Snow Leopard Conservation & Improved Livelihoods of Mongolia; Establishing Beekeeping Around Queen Elizabeth National Park of Uganda; and Permaculture Farming & Local Product Revitalization in Nepal.
Following a call for proposals in April, The Lion’s Share received over 1600 applications from nonprofit organizations working in crucial wildlife areas. The calls for help detail loss of jobs and income, loss of conservation project funding, increased poaching, and widespread food insecurity. The Lion’s Share will continue to raise up to $3 million dollars to fund all the top 40 selected projects.
All 40 project locations support imperiled species, and more than half of all projects are based in locations where multiple endangered and critically endangered species are present. Nearly a quarter of projects are located in UNESCO Biosphere Reserves or World Heritage Sites, internationally recognized for their importance as conservation priorities. Investing in these crucial wildlife areas and supporting jobs and livelihoods in these local communities foster green growth. They address future economic risks by contributing to tackling climate change and biodiversity loss; safeguarding natural ecosystem services, such as clean water, crop pollination, and more; and reducing the risk of new zoonotic diseases emerging with the potential to become pandemics.
According to the World Travel and Tourism Council, wildlife tourism generated $ 343.6 billion and supported over 21.8 million jobs in 2018. Through wildlife tourism, communities directly benefit from wildlife, empowering them to develop enterprises and generate much-needed employment and income. Incentivized to protect wildlife and their habitats, they have become valuable guardians of nature at the frontlines of conservation. However, travel restrictions to slow the pandemic have depleted economic lifelines for hundreds of millions of people and conservation activities in wildlife-rich areas. Iconic species such as rhinos, elephants, gorillas, sea turtles, tigers, sharks and pangolins are facing unprecedented threats.
Achim Steiner, UNDP Administrator, said: “The spread of COVID-19 is a socio-economic, environmental, and governance crisis as much as a health crisis – a stark reminder that human health and well-being is intrinsically linked to the health and well-being of our planet. We will recover from this crisis, but we must use this opportunity to build back a more equal, inclusive, sustainable, safer and healthier planet. By leveraging the power of partnerships, The Lion’s Share has been able to not only raise financing for conservation and wildlife, but also engage businesses and consumers on this urgent issue.”
The announcement comes on the heels of the United Nations Secretary-General’s call to transform the tourism sector to become more resilient, inclusive and sustainable, warning that the impacts of COVID-19 on tourism threaten to increase poverty and inequality, as well as reverse nature conservation efforts. Indeed, the top 40 proposals selected for funding highlight that the most common threats facing communities are the loss of jobs and income (100 percent of proposals), increased poaching and overfishing (95 percent), and increased habitat destruction (95 percent).
“We are extremely grateful for the support offered by the Lion’s Share,” said Dr. Michelle Henley, Co-founder, CEO and Principal Researcher of Elephants Alive – one of the funding recipients. “This grant will enable us to upskill the Black Mamba Anti-Poaching Unit to keep bees and grow permaculture, so that these women who are critically involved in protecting our wildlife can supplement much-needed income. This proof of concept in South Africa will then be implemented in vital elephant corridors, ensuring that living with elephants can be viewed as a bonus and not a burden to local people. Over the last 100 years we have lost 97% of the African continental elephant population. How lonely it would be for our children if there were no elephants left. When we protect elephants, we protect habitats and a multitude of other species in the process, and in turn, our planet.”
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