One in 10 Chinese tourists in Japan and South-East Asia plan to buy ivory despite knowing it’s illegal
New report indicates how Chinese travellers may consume ivory while abroad in Japan or South-East Asia
New report indicates how Chinese travellers may consume ivory while abroad in Japan or South-East Asia
China's Wildlife Protection Law allows for commercial trade in parts and products of big cats, pangolins, elephants, bears and other threatened wild animal species – and early indications suggest that situation is unlikely to change
The extent to which the Chinese Government supports the continued use of pangolins, the world’s most trafficked mammal, is revealed today in a new EIA report
This week saw EIA share our unique perspectives on environmental crime as part of a major international webinar
The world’s eight pangolin species are experiencing catastrophic levels of poaching and trafficking to feed demand for their scales, meat and other body parts. In 2016, the global community agreed to make the international commercial trade in pangolins and their parts and derivatives illegal.
Ahead of tomorrow’s (Wednesday’s) UN biodiversity summit, hosted online from New York, many world leaders have signed up to promise to halt the destruction of nature on Earth