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Split Project Tiger and Elephant, experts make their case

Both species have distinct conservation needs and require singular focus.

October 06, 2023 / 17:59 IST
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India logged a record 145 tiger deaths in the first nine months of 2023; the country has also lost 494 elephants to train accidents, electrocution, poaching, and poisoning in the past five years. (Photos: WWF India and NCF via Wikimedia Commons)
India logged a record 145 tiger deaths in the first nine months of 2023; the country has also lost 494 elephants to train accidents, electrocution, poaching, and poisoning in the past five years. (Photos: WWF India and NCF via Wikimedia Commons)

India logged a record 145 tiger deaths in the first nine months of 2023, up from 116 in 2022, 127 in 2021, and 106 in 2020, respectively, according to the National Tiger Conservation Authority (NTCA).

The country has also lost 494 elephants to train accidents, electrocution, poaching, and poisoning in the past five years, the Union Environment Ministry told the Lok Sabha in December 2022, highlighting the challenges undermining elephant conservation efforts.

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Despite these alarming trends, in April this year, India's Ministry of Environment, Forest and Climate Change (MoEFCC) merged Project Tiger (PT) and Project Elephant (PE) into a new project called Project Tiger and Elephant (PTE). This decision has surprised and divided conservationists, who fear that splitting focus will weaken both flagship conservation programs.

Under PT, the big cat population in the country has more than tripled in the past 15 years, from 1,441 in 2008 to 3,682 in 2023. It is India’s biggest conservation success story. On the other hand, Project Elephant never got the importance it deserves. “Though launched in 1992, much before the human-elephant conflict escalated, we’ve lost a great opportunity to proactively insulate people from elephants, and vice versa. As a result, today, in India, over 400 people die due to wild elephant attacks annually and over 100 elephants die due to multiple anthropogenic reasons,” says Anish Andheria, president, Wildlife Conservation Trust.