Environment Forum

Global environmental challenges

eBay bans ivory sales; should the world follow?

Photo

Young male elephants lock tusks in battle on the plains at the foot of Mount Kilimanjaro in Amboseli national park, southern Kenya, November 12, 2006. The United Nations, hosting November 6-17 climate talks in Nairobi, reckons blame for the vanishing snows of Kilimanjaro lies closer to hand — with global warming linked to human use of fossil fuels. REUTERS/Finbarr O’Reilly (KENYA)eBay says it is going to ban all sales of ivory by Jan. 1 in good news for elephants after a conservation group found more than 4,000 ivory listings on the online auction site.

It’s a rare example of a company imposing tougher rules than permitted by international trade rules. Should the world follow suit?

Ivory trade has been banned since 1989 but some stockpile exports from Botswana, Namibia, South Africa and Zimbabwe have been legal under the U.N. Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species.

eBay obviously reckons it’s better to ban sales — with a few exemptions for “antique” ivory from before 1900 — rather than try to make exemptions for “legal” ivory when telling the difference is all but impossible.An ivory merchant displays his goods in his shop in Abidjan December 15, 2003. The West African states of Nigeria, Ivory Coast and Senegal are turning a blind eye to llegal ivory sales that are fuelling poaching in surrounding countries, wildlife monitors said on Monday. Researchers found more than four tonnes on public display in Nigeria, Ivory Coast and Senegal, representing the ivory of about 760 elephants, which is far more than the estimated combined elephant population of the three states. REUTERS/Luc Gnago LG/AA   

  •