
Praveen Moman, Founder of Volcanoes Safaris, was recently invited to speak at the ‘Beyond Trophy Hunting’ event held at the prestigious Royal Geographical Society in London.
The evening was hosted by Born Free, an international wildlife and conservation charity focused on wild animal welfare and compassionate conservation.
The diverse panel of experts discussed why trophy hunting is one of the most contentious forms of wild animal exploitation. Some proponents argue it generates important revenue and employment, as well as supporting conservation, but the panellists were given the opportunity to explain and explore the viable alternatives.
Praveen spoke about the success and challenges facing Volcanoes Safaris as it navigates the path of reviving ecotourism in post-conflict Uganda and Rwanda, empowering local communities and promoting conservation of great apes.
Praveen said: “If wildlife and wilderness has no economic value, there is no incentive for governments to keep these areas. Conservation has to be part of the economic mainstream of a country, it has to pay. Unless we change the paradigm of these protected parks, and unless they support the communities... I don't think these parks will survive.”
Some of the key takeaways from the event include:
- Community ownership is key
- Wildlife requires connectivity and corridors
- Tourism must be the prevented from over powering conservation
- Credits (either carbon or biodiversity credits) should not create a culture of ‘business as usual’ excused by offsetting
Interested to learn more? Click Here to watch the full recording of the Beyond Trophy Hunting discussion.
Photo credit: Born Free