WILDLIFE CONSERVATION CAMPAIGN LAUNCHED IN CHINA

Environmental Panorama
International
November of 2007

 

21 Nov 2007 - Beijing, China – An advertising campaign aimed at changing consumer attitudes about unsustainable wildlife trade was today launched in Beijing.

The campaign, consisting of creative print, video and online advertisements, is part of an awareness-raising project between WWF and TRAFFIC, with support from Ogilvy, the international advertising agency.

Each year, hundreds of millions of plants and animals are caught or harvested from the wild in China and then sold as food, pets, ornamental plants, leather, tourist curios and medicine. Although much of this trade is legal and does not harm wild populations, a worryingly proportion is illegal and is threatening the survival of many animal and plant species that are being pushed dangerously close to extinction.

The campaign aims to encourage sustainability in wildlife trade by informing urban consumers about the environmental harm that illegal and unsustainable wildlife trade causes, and by providing guidance on how to counteract it.

Graphic images will depict the long evolutionary history of a particular species, ending abruptly at the wildlife products that threaten its survival. For example, the evolution of tigers stops at a bottle of tiger bone wine, the evolution of Asian freshwater turtles ends at a bowl of soup, while elephant evolution finishes at an ivory carving.

”One of the most powerful tools for addressing illegal and unsustainable wildlife trade is to persuade consumers to make informed choices when buying wildlife-based products,” said Xu Hongfa, head of TRAFFIC’s China programme.

“I believe this campaign will get consumers thinking about their consumption habits, and I urge them to join us in working to conserve our irreplaceable natural heritage."

The campaign will take place in the months leading up to Chinese New Year, a time when wildlife products are often consumed as luxury food or given as gifts.

END NOTES:

• The Beijing subway is currently running the campaign video on an electronic subway tunnel billboard at Jianguomen station through 20 December. Campaign ads will also be appearing on TV stations around the country.
Caroline Liou, Programme Officer
TRAFFIC China

 
 

Source: WWF – World Wildlife Foundation International (http://www.wwf.org)
Press consultantship
All rights reserved

 
 
 
 

 

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