Predator-proof corral in Basho Valley.
BWCDO/PSL has won several prestigious international awards, including the Whitley Award in 1999, the Rolex Award for Enterprise in 2006 and the National Geographic Emerging Explorer Award in 2009. In 2017, BWCDO won the UNDP Equator prize for innovative, grassroots solutions to environmental problems.
Despite their increased acceptance in conservation practice, insurance and compensation programmes remain highly contested and subject to a variety of critiques. The main criticism is that such programmes are not efficient but expensive, thus not sustainable.
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We found this to be partly true, but this is no reason to abandon the approach, rather to fund it even more. Insurance schemes are efficient, if run and managed by local communities. But they do suffer from lack of money from international donors and even government agencies who do not like cash transfers to the poor on (neo-liberal) ideological grounds.
What if, in reply to the argument that insurance schemes are too expensive to run, farmers say that in the absence of any compensation mechanism, snow leopard conservation is expensive and unsustainable for them.
Moreover, alternative approaches are equally flawed and suffer from financial and technical constraints, but we seldom hear calls for their abandonment. The main reason is that in the alternative approaches the money is ‘wasted’ by conservation professionals and government officials, while in the case of compensations schemes, they are ‘wasted’ on communities.
Our main challenge so far has not been to convince the local people to protect the species, but, rather, it is to make state and conservation institutions realise that snow leopard conservation is not only an ecological imperative, but it is also a political and economic one.
Barring a few exceptions, there is, however, little sympathy for social sciences amongst wildlife conservationists. State agencies and national and international conservation organisations are mainly staffed by natural scientists with little training and interest in the social dimensions of conservation.
Thus, we see very little attention is paid to social issues such as economic and psychological cost of conservation to communities.
The image of the snow leopard that prevails in such institutions and organisations is that of a ‘wilderness’ predator, that iconic American cultural idea which is based on worship of ‘pristine’ and ‘untamed’ nature.
But research from the field shows that snow leopards live close to human societies and indeed, as mentioned above, depend on them for their sustenance.
Ecological research from India, Nepal and other areas on snow leopards-livestock relationship show that if humans and their livestock are removed from the snow leopard habitat, the ‘natural’ prey of snow leopard and eventually the snow leopard population itself will decline.
Ignoring this link between wild snow leopards and domesticated economy can be detrimental for the snow leopards in the long run.
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Due to BWCDO’s efforts over the last two decades, the snow leopard population in Baltistan is stable. There are currently between 30 and 40 snow leopards in BWCDOs project area, and between 300 and 400 in Pakistan.
In September 2017, The International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) downlisted the threat level to snow leopard from Endangered to Vulnerable, indicating successful efforts to conserve this species in Pakistan and worldwide.
But this revised status should not been seen as a signal to stop working for the protection of this species. We need to do more and continue to fund conservation action on the ground such as insurance schemes and predator proof corrals to alleviate the social and economic cost of conservation to communities.
When I was in Misgar last year, I heard one of the villagers say that many NGOs working for snow leopard conservation are “dollar wala NGOs,” meaning that they spend money on strengthening their own organisations rather than on compensating farmers for their losses and building predator proof corrals.
The farmers in Baltistan are not country bumpkins who do not understand the political economy of international aid and conservation. In so many words they remind us that we, the NGOs, who are a bridge between society and state, must see conservation from their eyes.
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