Prøve GULL - Gratis

THE $80 MILLION QUESTION

BBC Wildlife

|

April 2021

The world spends a huge amount of money on orangutan conservation every year but their numbers are still declining. What’s going on, why isn’t palm oil to blame and what can we do to arrest the downward curve?

- James Fair

THE $80 MILLION QUESTION

According to Erik Meijaard, a conservation scientist who has been working for almost 30 years in South-East Asia, the world spends $80 million (about £60 million) a year on orangutan conservation. Erik and a number of colleagues are currently trying to determine exactly where this money goes. “We are looking at who is spending it – governments, NGOs, research organisations, sanctuaries, oil and timber companies, where the money comes from and what it is being invested in, and whether we can link that spending to local orangutan population trends,” he tells me during a video call from Brunei, where he lives for much of the year.

Though Erik’s research is unfinished, there’s one thing he can say with certainty. “What is clear is that we are spending all that money but we are still losing orangutans.” In other words, it’s not working.

Orangutans live on the Indonesian islands of Borneo and Sumatra, and are correspondingly separate species. There is also a third species, the Tapanuli orangutan, also found on Sumatra (see p55). Here are the broad-brush figures: in 2016, the IUCN estimated Bornean orangutan numbers at just over 100,000 (a figure forecast to drop to 47,000 by 2025), with about 15.5 million hectares of available habitat. Sumatran orangutans, in contrast, are considerably rarer, with an estimated 14,000 individuals contained within a much smaller area, mainly the Leuser Ecosystem, a 2.6 million hectare swathe (that’s 1.3 times the size of Wales) of rainforest in the island’s north.

Borneo and Sumatra may be very different in terms of the status and conservation of their resident orangutans, but they do have one thing in common: neither are having much success in safeguarding these apes.

FLERE HISTORIER FRA BBC Wildlife

BBC Wildlife

BBC Wildlife

Can animals make friends?

THERE ARE MANY REASONS WHY ANIMAL species band together with others of their kind – for protection in numbers, to achieve a common goal, to safeguard young or to maximise breeding opportunities. But are any of these relationships true friendships in our human understanding of the word?

time to read

1 mins

November 2025

BBC Wildlife

BBC Wildlife

What is the rights of nature movement?

THE RIGHTS OF NATURE MOVEMENT argues that nonhuman natural entities and ecosystems, from rivers to woodlands and coral reefs to savannahs, are not mere property but rights holders in law.

time to read

2 mins

November 2025

BBC Wildlife

BBC Wildlife

BEAK & CLAW

Raptors have declined across Africa, but a new effort to safeguard them is underway

time to read

7 mins

November 2025

BBC Wildlife

BBC Wildlife

TAKE ME TO THE RIVER

Going deep into the Amazon on a river cruise offers a different way of experiencing this extraordinary place

time to read

7 mins

November 2025

BBC Wildlife

BBC Wildlife

NIGHT MOVES

Noctourism reveals wildlife's secret rhythms while boosting vital conservation efforts

time to read

7 mins

November 2025

BBC Wildlife

BBC Wildlife

Mountain highs and seafaring lows with Lauren Owens Lambert

THE INSIDE WORLD OF WILDLIFE PHOTOGRAPHY

time to read

3 mins

November 2025

BBC Wildlife

BBC Wildlife

Proboscis monkey's big nose boosts vocal identity

A new study shows how nose shape creates resonant frequencies that allow individuals to be recognised

time to read

1 mins

November 2025

BBC Wildlife

BBC Wildlife

"I have never known fear like it"

Leopard and lions in Mozambique

time to read

3 mins

November 2025

BBC Wildlife

BBC Wildlife

Free as a bird

THE ARTICLE ON HOW ANIMALS USE sound in the September issue included comment on dialect or accent in birdsong.

time to read

2 mins

November 2025

BBC Wildlife

BBC Wildlife

Rattlesnakes inbreeding

Break up of habitat leads to desperate measures

time to read

1 min

November 2025

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size