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聞く/Video/TED Talk/Why I Want to Bring Lions Back to My Village | Seif Hamisi | TED

Why I Want to Bring Lions Back to My Village | Seif Hamisi | TED

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0:07Picture this.
0:09You are a 5- or 6-year-old getting ready to go to bed,
0:13and then suddenly, you hear these lion roars.
0:17This is how it was in the early '70s
0:19in my village in Taveta in Kenya,
0:21on the southeastern slope of Mount Kilimanjaro.
0:24It was scary then, as it might be now,
0:27but looking back,
0:29I see it as something powerful,
0:31a beautiful reminder of how close we lived with nature.
0:36Sadly, the nighttime roars
0:39and the many animals that once roamed our village
0:44are gone.
0:46What happened in my village has happened across Africa.
0:51Our forests, savannahs,
0:53grasslands and wetlands are disappearing very fast
0:57and the hardest-hit places are community lands
1:01where people and wildlife lived side-by-side.
1:05In five decades, five decades,
1:08much of the land outside protected areas
1:11has been converted into either farms or settlements.
1:15It's not surprising that the population of wildlife in Africa
1:19has declined by three quarters in the same period.
1:23This is not just a sad statistic,
1:25but a crisis.
1:27All of us know that we've spent billions on conservation in Africa,
1:33yet wildlife keeps on declining,
1:36and people are going deeper into poverty
1:40and becoming even more vulnerable to climate change.
1:44Why?
1:46Because we've been applying ecological solutions
1:50to fix what are inherently economic problems.
1:54The truth is that conservation works only if it creates income
1:59to people living closest to nature.
2:01That means we have to make nature not just something to protect,
2:07but something to invest in.
2:09That's why we have to grow capitalist solutions in conservation.
2:15Not the exploitative type,
2:17but models where nature drives business,
2:22where healthy ecosystems bring real income to families,
2:26where nature conservation and economic growth
2:29go hand in hand.
2:32This is beginning to happen across Africa,
2:35from the shrublands of Namaqualand in South Africa
2:38to the winding tributaries of Okavango River in Botswana,
2:42the grasslands,
2:44savannah woodlands in Kenya,
2:46Namibia, Mozambique, Madagascar and Zimbabwe
2:50to the forests of Ivory Coast, Liberia and Congo,
2:55we are building better natural resource management systems
3:00and incentivizing efforts to bring back wildlife populations.
3:04I want to give you a couple of examples.
3:07In many parts of South Africa,
3:09herding livestock isn't just a job, it's a way of life.
3:13But many rural farmers there
3:16are struggling to get their cattle to the market.
3:19Even though they own half of the livestock in the country,
3:23only five percent of meat comes from them,
3:26and the grass continues to suffer as cattle graze
3:30on the same land all year round.
3:34And when their cattle gets to the market, if they do,
3:37they are often malnourished and can't fetch a fair price.
3:43There's a better way.
3:44Let me introduce to you Miss Mpolokeng Ngubo,
3:48a great livestock farmer and herder from Eastern Cape, South Africa.
3:53With support from Conservation International,
3:56she and other farmers have turned back to traditional grazing,
4:01where livestock moves between pasture
4:04and allowing land to rest and recover.
4:07Healthy grasslands means healthy livestock to them,
4:10and the change here is that those farmers have agreed to protect the land
4:16as they access a cattle market that comes directly to them.
4:20No middlemen, no long trips.
4:24And it works.
4:25Miss Mpolokeng’s cow, in recent auction,
4:28the cattle fetched the highest bid in the market.
4:31Her smile tells it all.
4:33And this is how it works.
4:35Because the model is not top-down.
4:39It's built on what communities already know and practice.
4:42Now the grazing pressure has reduced,
4:45and with that, the fields are now humming with insects and chattering buds,
4:50wildlife is getting restored,
4:52one grazing cycle at a time.
4:56And with cash streaming to farmers' pockets.
5:00Now in Kenya, business solutions are taking off, too.
5:03In Tulu Hills, farmers have transitioned from slash and burn
5:08to one of the earliest forest carbon projects.
5:12Here they are conserving and protecting one million acres of wilderness.
5:17And around Maasai Mara,
5:19all of you perhaps have heard about Maasai Mara,
5:22communities living around there have come up together,
5:25pulled their land voluntarily
5:27and formed this big wildlife conservancies that they own.
5:31They leased these lands to safari operators and ecologists
5:36and get incomes
5:38while maintaining their land rights and way of life.
5:42During the COVID pandemic,
5:44tourism revenues crashed.
5:47And what happened?
5:48The conservancies took up loans
5:51and paid the leases.
5:54When the pandemic eased and tourism came back,
5:59they repaid those loans quickly,
6:01showing that capitalist solutions are actually maturing.
6:06This intervention has brought 180,000 hectares under community protection,
6:13doubling the space for wildlife in that area.
6:17And the impact to the families
6:21who are in this arrangement is transformational.
6:26On average,
6:28a household takes around 230 dollars per month.
6:33A little bit less than starting salary of a university graduate in Kenya,
6:37but in a place where jobs are scarce and the future is uncertain,
6:44nature is not only surviving, but it's paying bills,
6:47it's putting kids through schools,
6:49it is bringing dignity, security and choice.
6:53These are the kind of 21-century conservation approaches
6:57that we must accelerate.
7:00We must bring tomorrow's conservation business solutions today
7:05because this is the right vision for Africa.
7:09It's the vision that our changing climate demands.
7:13It is a vision, ultimately, that ultimately people benefit.
7:17Not because they gave up their culture, but because they protected it.
7:24Now ladies and gentlemen, allow me to say this provoking,
7:29perhaps an annoying statement.
7:33People talk about money as if it's the root of all evil.
7:38But in conservation of nature,
7:40it's clearly the lack of it
7:44that’s a true root of evil,
7:47that's driving the forces of degradation
7:50and destruction that we see today in those landscapes.
7:54Time is not on our side.
7:56We have to work with dedication, speed and scale.
7:59But the tide is on our side,
8:01because today, communities are stronger,
8:04their voice is louder in decision making,
8:07and the stronger rights and safeguards.
8:12Finance and market connectivity today,
8:15supported by an expanding technological space,
8:18has made it easier today,
8:22more than before, to invest,
8:24to innovate and build businesses
8:28with and for communities that are living closest to nature.
8:32And policies and incentives by governments
8:37are taking a different level.
8:42For example, the wildlife profit- enhancing policies of South Africa,
8:49Zimbabwe and Namibia
8:50to the Kenya carbon and conservancy policies,
8:53more revenue is now streaming to families
8:57and communities that are closest to nature.
9:01Doesn't matter which ecosystem you are talking about.
9:06Because it's only through economic prosperity
9:11of people living alongside nature
9:15that nature, wildlife and wilderness will return.
9:22Maybe then the wildlife will be restored around my village,
9:27and maybe then, maybe,
9:30my grandchildren will get to hear the lions roar back again.
9:35(Lion roars)
9:39(Applause)