SLOVENIA TO EMBARK ON MASSIVE BEAR HUNT

Environmental Panorama
International
February of 2007

 

14 Feb 2007 - Gland, Switzerland – Although one of the first European countries to protect the brown bear, Slovenia is considering increasing hunting quotas for brown bears, an act that may decimate the country's entire population.

The Slovenian government has announced that it will allow a hunting quota of 106 bears in 2007. Add in the number of bears killed each year on roads and railway lines, and the mortality rate jumps to as high as 130 individuals.

“This massive hunt will have dramatic consequences for the species throughout Europe as the bear population in Slovenia is shared with many other countries in the region," said Gerald Dick of WWF's Global Species Programme.

“The population is especially important as it is a source for reintroducing bears into Austria, Italy and France, whose populations are minimal and fragmented,” Dick added.

Before Slovenia joined the European Union, around 50 bears were killed each year by hunters. In 2002, the government drastically increased the quota to 100 individuals. In that year, 116 bears were killed.

The Slovenia government claims there are 500–700 bears in the country. Based on reliable local information, WWF believes the lower estimate is more realistic.

As the quota does not include the large number of road casualties (in 2005, 40 bears were killed on roads), the overall mortality rate of Slovenian bears could be close to 30 per cent of the population. WWF is asking for a clarification of the population size and justification for an official hunting quota of over 20 per cent per year, which is unscientific and unsustainable.

“As Slovenia will take over the EU presidency in early 2008, it should use this opportunity to prove it can be a leader in conservation by applying the EU guidelines on managing large carnivores,” said Dick.

“These guidelines are clearly asking for a population-based type of management, urging countries to cooperate internationally and to perform transparent population estimates. Killing more bears is not the answer.”

A final decision whether the hunt will go ahead is expected shortly by the Slovenian Environment Ministry.
Gerald Dick, WWF Global Species Programme
Joanna Benn, Communications Manager
WWF Global Species Programme

+ More

WWF Director General addresses Finnish lawmakers on energy

14 Feb 2007 - Helsinki, Finland – Over 150 decision-makers and representatives from the energy sector assembled in Finland’s Parliament to discuss how the country can meet its energy needs while reducing greenhouse gas emissions.

“Finding a sustainable energy solution for Finland has international significance for meeting global energy solutions,” stressed WWF International Director General James Leape, who was one of the speakers addressing the parliament’s Finance Committee.

According to a WWF-Finland model, growing energy demand in Finland can be met by 2020 through energy efficiency and renewable energy sources. The model pointed out that such sources are 2.7 times the production capacity of a nuclear power plant currently under construction.

“An investment in energy efficiency and renewable energy sources is an alternative scenario to more nuclear power, and it would give Finland a foothold in the global market for sustainable energy technology.”

He added that nuclear power cannot be a solution for global energy and climate change problems, and that nuclear power is not needed when the current potential of energy efficiency and renewable energies are effectively put into use and sustainable energy technologies further developed.

“Small but innovative countries like Finland have a lot to contribute to solving the challenges of climate change,” Leape added. “It is also important that Finland supports the efforts of the EU to be a leader in energy and climate policy.”

Other participants attending the parliamentary seminar included Professor Peter Lund from Helsinki University of Technology, who presented WWF-Finland’s energy scenario, and Jukka Noponen, Director of the environment programme at the Sitra Research Institute, who talked about opportunities for Finland to compete in the global energy technology market. Business cases were presented by the Nokia and Vacon corporations.

END NOTES:

• The expert group guiding WWF-Finland’s energy model, Virtaa tulevaisuuteen, included experts from Helsinki University of Technology, VTT Technical Research Centre of Finland, Federation of Finnish Energy Industries and the Government Institute of Economic Research VATT.
Päivi Rosqvist, Head of Communications
WWF-Finland

 
Source: WWF – World Wildlife Foundation International (http://www.wwf.org)
 
 
 
 

 

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