Redian新闻
>
Controversy Over China’s Captive Breeding Rumbles On

Controversy Over China’s Captive Breeding Rumbles On

公众号新闻

As a five-year legal case on macaque breeding closes in Henan, concerns remain about China’s new wildlife protection law.

In March this year, prosecutors in Nanyang, Henan province, withdrew charges in a case concerning the trading of macaques. The five defendants — a breeder, pet shop owner, driver and two live streamers — had been charged in 2018 with the illegal purchase, transport, and sale of endangered animals taken from the wild.

Despite the macaque being a Class II protected animal in China, breeding them in captivity is allowed with a permit and has become a specialty industry in Henan. The defendants did have a permit to breed the species but were accused of selling non-captive bred animals.

In late 2022, after several rounds of court proceedings, Nanyang Central Court sent the case for a retrial. During this, the prosecutor’s office withdrew its charges, citing “changes in the law and judicial interpretation.” It was referring to an interpretation document issued in April 2022 by China’s supreme court and supreme procuratorate.

The document states that cases should be judged on their particular circumstances, taking into account whether the animal in question is captive-bred, the current state of captive breeding of the species, and how threatened it is in the wild.

Those involved in the macaque case are still pursuing an appeal, requesting a verdict of complete innocence, saying that the provincial forestry department had issued a “domestication and breeding license” and that the traded monkeys were “captive-bred” rather than “wild” animals.

The case attracted plenty of interest among commentators in China because both the interpretation and the newly amended Wildlife Protection Law seem to represent a more accommodating regime for cases involving trade of captive-bred wild animals — meaning a more “reasonable” response when an offence is deemed less serious.

Some civil society organizations are concerned that this weakens conservation efforts, encourages the expansion of the wildlife-breeding industry, and could easily lead to illegally hunted animals being passed off as captive-bred. However, some academics think the amended law refines conservation management by making it more case-by-case and less one-size-fits-all.

So, how should the amended law’s potential impact on wildlife breeding be understood?

Too lenient or more sensible?

A revision to the law was launched in 2020 and the new version came into force on May 1, 2023, strengthening protections for wildlife habitats. However, controversy has surrounded the law’s treatment of commercial captive breeding of protected species. One such category is species regarded as having “special ecological, scientific or social significance” — known as the “three-haves.”

There are more than 1,700 such species in China, including animals no longer common in the wild, such as wolves, red foxes, and raccoon dogs, and those that remain common, such as tortoises, civets, sparrows, bamboo rats, and geckos.

China has just updated its list of protected animals, and the wild boar, Sus scrofa, has been removed from the list. Some researchers interpret this as a result of the high population of wild boars and the damage they cause to farmland.

A wild boar breaks into a village in Beijing, 2013. VCG

The amended law provides for “graded, categorized management of wild animals bred in captivity.” In terms of protection priority, “three-haves” animals are behind “national key protected wildlife.” The latter are divided into Class II and Class I, with Class I animals having the greatest protections and prompting the most severe sentences for offences involving them.

Some of the changes in the amended law have been interpreted as loosening controls on the captive breeding of “three-haves” animals. In Article 25, the qualifying condition for breeding such animals has been changed from “A license for captive breeding must be obtained” to “A record shall be filed with the local competent authority.” Moreover, the maximum fine for failing to do so is just 2,000 yuan ($279).

Shan Shui Conservation Center, a nature protection organization, has written that filing a record is not enough to ensure that captive-breeding facilities are sufficiently well monitored and are not used to launder wild-caught animals. This may weaken agencies’ monitoring and protection of “three-haves” animals, the organization adds.

Another example is Article 29, which provides that nationally protected wild animals for which captive-breeding techniques are “mature and firmly established” can be moved onto the Directory of National Key Protected Wildlife for Captive Breeding. In practice, this means more wild animal species under Class I and II national protection can be bred and farmed. Meanwhile, “captive-bred populations” for which breeding techniques are firmly established can be removed from the list of national key protected wildlife.

However, in terms of their appearance and behavior, it is hard to distinguish wild animals caught in the wild from those that have been bred in captivity for multiple generations. Those who are so minded may also pass off wild-caught animals as captive-bred by exploiting loopholes in the law.

Loopholes in the provisions for artificial breeding mean that trade of animal products is similarly problematic. Article 30 of the amended law states that trade in “wild animals and their products shall in the main comprise captive-bred populations.” An animal conservationist, who does not wish to be named, expressed concern: “Such regulations are difficult to enforce, in practice. So long as there is no clear and direct evidence of poaching, there is no way to check whether products come from wild animals or animals bred in captivity.”

Others take a different view. In an interview with China Environment News, Qin Tianbao, director of the Research Institute of Environmental Law at Wuhan University, says that the new revision of the law is more a “difference in regulatory approach” than a reduction of administrative powers.

“Different gradings and categorizations correspond with different systems of management, and a relaxation in procedures does not equate to reduced powers ... The management system in turn, with gradings and categorizations that correspond with conservation needs, is then adjusted and optimized accordingly.”

IC

‘Conservation’ versus ‘utilization’

Underlying the row about wildlife breeding are the concepts of “conservation” and “utilization.”

Before the latest update, since coming into effect in 1988 the Wildlife Protection Law had been amended four times — in 2004, 2008, 2016 and 2018. The thrust of the 1988 legislation, pervading all of its provisions, was for “strengthened conservation of resources, active domestication and breeding, and reasonable development and utilization.”

The law has been amended with increasing frequency over the last 20 years, alongside the periodic outbreak of public health incidents linked to wildlife.

“There has been some progress,” says Zhou Ke, a professor at Renmin University of China Law School. “During the succession of amendments, provisions on the breeding of wild animals have gone from ‘active domestication’ (1988) to ‘reasonable utilization’ (2004), and on to ‘regulated utilization’ (2022).”

Following much discussion of “conservation” and “utilization,” “regulated utilization” remained the main principle in law up until 2016, while retaining the concept of wildlife’s “utilization as a resource.”

The situation changed abruptly with the outbreak of COVID-19 in 2020, amid suspicion that the virus originated in wild animals. Within three months of the start of the pandemic, China banned the consumption of wild animals as food. This move was heavily influenced by the public mood at the time, and concerns about the risks of breeding and eating wildlife. It was regarded as China’s “strictest wildlife conservation measure” to date.

Zhou Ke explains: “People began strongly suspecting a link between wild animals and the epidemic, especially the eating of wild animals ... and the public demanded that the risk be dealt with in law.”

By 2022, however, with the global economy slumping, long-held public concerns about climate and environmental issues began to fade. The concern for wildlife and public health has been diminishing as pressing economic issues come to the fore.

A campaigner with an animal protection organization, who wishes to remain anonymous, says: “Amending the law also involves trade-offs (between protecting industry and protecting wildlife). When there’s a dropping off in the intensity of public opinion on wild animals and public health, coupled with economic concerns, the voice of ‘industry’ becomes extremely important.”

Such trade-offs are also reflected in contradictions among the provisions of the amended law, emphasizing “conservation” on the one hand, while stressing “scientific utilization” and “regulated utilization” on the other. Among legal professionals, there are also those who believe that wildlife conservation may in practice be giving way to commercial exploitation.

A massive industry needs more precise enforcement

Zhou Ke says that breeding wildlife should never have become a commercial industry. “When the Wildlife Protection Law was introduced in 1988, it provided for the protection of wildlife as a natural resource,” he says. “Active breeding and domestication, as proposed at the time, were not driven by the objective of developing an industry. Commercial utilization simply meant breeding for business purposes, but conservation of natural resources should have been the real objective.”

Wildlife breeding is widely seen as a way for people to escape poverty, not to increase wild animal populations. For instance, the giant salamander has a nationwide farmed population exceeding one million, but in the wild it has been pushed to the brink of extinction.

A Chinese giant salamander at a farm in Zhangjiajie, Hunan province, September 2021. Wu Huiyuan/Sixth Tone

China’s wildlife breeding, trading, and processing industry has an annual revenue of around 500 to 600 billion yuan and employs over 14 million people. There are already hundreds of species of wild animals bred in captivity throughout the country, and supply chains have developed for intensive breeding of snakes, deer, crocodiles and frogs.

Before coronavirus, farming bamboo rats had become a specialty in Guangxi, with annual revenue reaching over 2 billion yuan. The size of the sector makes it very difficult to ban the breeding of wild animals altogether.

A more granular approach to managing conservation perhaps offers a way forward. Liu Jinmei, director-general of the Chinese environmental protection organization Friends of Nature, said in an interview: “Given today’s catch-all regulations and the multiplying assortment of illegal practices, along with a dearth of professional discernment skills in grassroots law enforcement, it is extremely difficult to obtain evidence and make it stick. Enforcement costs will only fall, and efficiency rise, if the legal provisions can be made more granular.”

Zhou Ke believes that the next step, going beyond the Wildlife Protection Law, will involve more narrowly focused, specialized administrative regulations.

“The latest amendment seeks to restrict development and utilization, and its original intent was good. Objectively, however, the effect when implemented is to encourage commercial exploitation of wild animals and the practices of commercial breeding and domestication. So, on the heels of the latest amendment, we should prevent such consequences ... from re-arising, avoiding these kinds of errors by means of localized administrative legislation.”

Reported by Cui Qiwen.
This article was first published in China Dialogue. It is republished here with permission.
(Header image: A racoon dog in Dandong, Liaoning province, 2017. VCG)

Download the new Sixth Tone app at the App Store or Google Play
APK file for Android:
https://image4.sixthtone.com/pkg/sixthtone.apk
(Copy URL and open in browser)

微信扫码关注该文公众号作者

戳这里提交新闻线索和高质量文章给我们。
相关阅读
In China’s Weight Loss Camps, a Dangerous Obsession With NumbersChina’s Craigslist, 58.com, Accused of Selling RésumésTech Addiction Leaves China’s Rural Youth Wired for DistractionChinese Climbers Scale Everest, Tragedy and Daring Rescue EnsueChina Updates Rules, Military Personnel Can Now Have Three KidsThe Shanghai Museum Keeping Memories Of Jewish Refugees AliveHow China’s Greatest Ever Film Was Rescued From OblivionChina’s ‘Special Forces’ Savers Travel Far for Higher InterestGood News For Cold Noodle Lovers: License Requirements Relaxed【2023坛庆】@ 2 Bridge over Troubled WaterYoung Chinese Obsess Over MBTI, the American Personality Test春来正是读书天诗里诗外Game Overpriced: Honor of Kings’ Fashion Line Leaves Fans Fuming私立学校的中产家庭turn over 太高,最后留下的都是老钱白人和双医生印度人In China, AI Clones Are Putting Human Livestreamers Out of WorkHow the BRI Reshaped China’s Medical Aid SpendingHalf of China’s Gig Work Seekers Have Undergrad Degrees: Report《人生如戏—寻找另一半自己》五【周末综艺会8期】《Somewhere over the Rainbow 彩虹之上》Brokerage Apps Allowing Overseas Trading Pulled From App StoresAs Viewers Fret, China Vows to Streamline Fees for OTT Content声声慢 寻寻觅觅(Over and over)【LEAP eSalon】Nailing a Career Pivot: Engineer to Consultant今日实习|Point 72 Entry-level Quantitative Researcher 火热招聘中!Majority of Parents Stressed Over Children’s Education: Survey也求建议,我上周将前公司401K roll over 到了Fidelity,大概200K左右,准备买大盘股指数,该如何操作才好?Can Rural Vloggers Make China’s Countryside Cool?Death of Coco Lee Triggers Public Discussion on Depression【LEAP eSalon】Success Strategies on Job Search & Career ChangeHow a Controversial Play Captured Aranya’s Cultural Divide美中博弈俄乌和谈(上)Ex-Soldier Sleeps in Cave for 22 Years to Protect Song Treasures美中博弈俄乌和谈(下)Established Chinese Apparel Brands Struggle to Stay AfloatJetBrains发布独立Rust IDE:RustRoverTroubled Singing Reality Show Accused of Mistreating Coco LeeTo Stop Teen From Moving, Chongqing Mom Flees With School PapersGlasses On, China’s First Civilian Astronaut Takes a Giant LeapTipping Livestreamers ‘Out of Control’: China State Broadcaster
logo
联系我们隐私协议©2024 redian.news
Redian新闻
Redian.news刊载任何文章,不代表同意其说法或描述,仅为提供更多信息,也不构成任何建议。文章信息的合法性及真实性由其作者负责,与Redian.news及其运营公司无关。欢迎投稿,如发现稿件侵权,或作者不愿在本网发表文章,请版权拥有者通知本网处理。