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UNEP NEWS CENTRE
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Home | Press Release | Press Releases:August 2014
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Home
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Press Releases
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International Youth Day Celebrated in Kenya and Around the World with a Focus on Youth and Mental Health
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12-8-2014 00:00:00
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Celebrating the Majesty of one of the World's most Threatened Animals on World Elephant Day 12-8-2014 00:00:00
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Global Peace Initiative of Women Convenes Environmental Conference in Kenya
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UN Conference Takes Historic Strides to Strengthen Chemical Safety Globally
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Statement by Ibrahim Thiaw, UN Assistant-Secretary-General and UNEP Deputy Executive Director at the London Conference on Illegal Wildlife Trade 2014
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Hundreds of Millions of Hectares, Nearly the Size of Brazil, Face Degradation Threat - UN Report Warns
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Plastic Waste Causes Financial Damage of US$13 Billion to Marine Ecosystems Each Year as Concern Grows over Microplastics
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Message by the Executive Secretary of the UN Convention to Combat Desertification Monique Barbut on the Occasion of World Day to Combat Desertification
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17-6-2014 00:00:00
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Message by UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-Moon on World Day to Combat Desertification 2014 17-6-2014 00:00:00
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Thematic Areas
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Climate Change
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Remarks by UNEP Director of Communications Nick Nuttall at FIA Sport Conference Week
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Remarks by Achim Steiner to the Future Responsibility Conference, Munich
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Keynote Address by Achim Steiner UN Under-Secretary-General and UNEP Executive Director at the Global Forum for Food and Agriculture (GFFA)
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Multimedia
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Economic and Environmental Role of Wetlands
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Interview with Nick Davidson, Ramsar Convention’s Deputy Secretary General at CBD, COP11. The key role that rapidly diminishing wetlands play in supporting human life and biodiversity needs to be recognized and integrated into decision-making as a vital component of the transition to a resource-efficient, sustainable world economy, according to a new TEEB report released today.
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Podcasts
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Smart investments needed to tackle drinking water crisis in DR Congo
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Cutting "black carbon" can help tackle climate change
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Sports events encouraged to go 'green'
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Year of the Bat focuses on threats facing world's only flying mammals
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How cleaner stoves can save lives and tackle climate change
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Kenya unveils new plans to tackle rising problem of e-waste
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All Multimedia
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Celebrating the Majesty of one of the World's most Threatened Animals on World Elephant Day di, aug 12, 2014
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UNEP is raising awareness at the political and societal level of the grave impact of poaching on elephant populations and the environment.
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African Elephants(Loxodanta Africana)in the Luangwa Valley, Zambia. Image: UNEP/GRID Arendal
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Nairobi, 12 August 2014 -World Elephant Day, now in its third year, should be an opportunity to celebrate the majesty of the planet's largest land animal. Instead, it is a reminder that if poaching continues at current rates, we face a future in which one of the environment's keystone species may be driven to extinction by rising demand for illegal ivory in the rapidly growing economies of Asia.
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UNEP and partner research reveals that large-scale seizures of ivory (consignments of over 800 kg) destined for Asia have more than doubled since 2009 and reached an all-time high in 2011.
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To meet this insatiable demand for ivory, approximately 20,000 to 25,000 elephants are killed per year, out of a population of between 420,000 and 650,000.
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Poached African ivory may represent an end-user street value in Asia of US$165 to US$188 million of raw ivory.
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The Asian elephant is now endangered, with less than 40,000 remaining worldwide, and it is estimated that one in every three elephants in Asia lives in captivity.
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Extinction is not, however, a foregone conclusion. If we pool our resources and renew our commitment to saving this most magnificent of species, we can end the illegal trade in ivory and reverse the heartbreaking slaughter, capture and imprisonment of elephants.
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The World Elephant Day website presents a list of practical steps that individuals can take to help elephants.
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These include studying elephants in their "keystone" role in the environment and their relationships with plants and other animals; learning about and supporting organisations that are working to protect habitat for wild elephants; not buying ivory or other illegal wildlife goods; and, supporting organizations that are working to stop the illegal poaching and trade of elephant ivory and other wildlife products.
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Through the publication of such important reports as The Environmental Crime Crisis, A Rapid Response Assessment, released during the first United Nations Environment Assembly in June 2014, UNEP is raising awareness at the political and societal level of the grave impact of poaching on elephant populations and the environment.
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Many organisations around the world are also collaborating to address the growing threat to elephants.
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One example of international enforcement collaboration is the International Consortium on Combating Wildlife Crime (ICCWC). The ICCWC, along with increased collaboration with countries and agencies such as UNEP, has created a more effective structure to provide support to countries in the fields of policing, customs, prosecution and the judiciary.
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Support UNEP as the global authority on the environment to address the serious and rising environmental impacts of environmental crime and help ensure the survival of our planet's precious and rapidly dwindling elephants.
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Additional Information
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See the full list of what you can do to help elephants at:
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http://www.unep.org/newscentre/Default.aspx?DocumentID=2791&ArticleID=10906&l=en
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For more information please contact:
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Niamh Brannigan, News & Media, UNEP
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+254 717 733348, niamh.brannigan@unep.org, unepnewsdesk@unep.org
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Stories of Change
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Bangladesh Uncovers the Crippling Cost of Climate Change Adaptation
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Rwanda Restores Ecosystems, Generating Record Tourism and New Opportunities for Growth
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Achim Steiner Briefs European Environment Ministers on UNEP's Role in the Post-2015 Process, In light of the Upcoming Inaugural UN Environment Assembly (UNEA)
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Tajikistan Green Investment in the Agricultural Sector helps realign its pathway to Sustainable Development
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Investment in Climate Change Adaptation can Help Promote the Livelihoods of 65% of Africans, finds new report
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UNEP and Brazilian National Water Agency Team up to Foster Monitoring of Water Quality in Brazil and Other Developing Countries
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