As WWF’s policy lead on wildlife conservation, Leigh Henry spearheads the organization’s engagement in the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES) and the International Whaling Commission. She has played a key role in efforts to combat the illegal tiger trade and eliminate tiger farms.
On November 8, 2012, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton took the unprecedented step of calling for a concerted global response to the illegal wildlife trade. A year earlier, the prospect of her publicly acknowledging the threat of this $10 billion criminal enterprise was little more than a pie-in-the-sky idea being bandied about by some of us internally at WWF. And yet here she was, calling attention to an issue that had flown under the radar for far too long.
Soon after Secretary Clinton’s speech, President Barack Obama established an interagency task force to guide US policy on wildlife trafficking. It was the culmination of months of hard work by our amazing team—and one of the proudest moments of my career.
But over the course of my 18 years at WWF, I’ve learned a hard truth: By themselves, no number of inspiring speeches or presidential actions can solve the toughest conservation challenges of our time. In the end, only public awareness and support combined with political will can carry us across the finish line. Otherwise, laws and policies are no more than words on paper.
Take, for example, China’s closure of its domestic ivory market in 2018, after years of public diplomacy and pressure from many actors, including WWF. China’s ivory ban has the potential to be a game changer for elephants, which are killed by the tens of thousands every year to fuel the ivory trade. And yet, in a recent WWF survey, 27% of the people identified as most likely to purchase ivory before the ban signaled that they would continue to do so. In response, WWF and partners have launched a campaign to reduce consumer demand for ivory. I have high hopes for the campaign, but it highlights the crucial roles of public awareness and support.
Another example is the lack of political will that contributes to the existence of tiger farms, which help supply the illegal trade in tiger parts and products. In 2007, WWF played a big role in securing an international agreement that tigers should not be bred for trade in their body parts and that existing farms should be phased out. But despite the agreement, tiger farms have proliferated in China, Laos, Thailand, and Vietnam.