The Phnom Penh Post

Gov’t seeking CITES licences to scale up crocodile farming

Number of building projects up in 1H

- Cheng Sokhorng Hor Kimsay

CAMBODIA is seeking to register more than a dozen crocodile farms under an internatio­nal treaty that protects the critically endangered Siamese crocodile, paving the way for the legal export of crocodile skins to lucrative overseas markets, according to state officials.

In Hul, deputy director of the Fisheries Conservati­on Department at the Ministry of Agricultur­e, said the government has submitted a list of 16 captive-bred crocodile farms to the Convention on Internatio­nal Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES) and is expecting a response on its applicatio­n for licences to permit quota-based exports of crocodile skins.

“We expect to receive approval since as our documents already comply with CITES regulation­s,” he said. “We only needed to confirm three or four points.”

Cambodia has about 700 crocodile farms with over 20,000 adult crocodiles and 300,000 hatchlings, according to recent estimates, with captive-breeding operations concentrat­ed in Siem Reap, Battambang, Kampong Thom and Kampong Chhnang provinces. The farms breed Siamese crocodile, a freshwater species that once ranged over much of Southeast Asia but whose numbers have dwindled to less than a few hundred in the wild, mostly in Cambodia.

Teetering on extinction, the Siamese crocodile is listed as a critically endangered species on CITES Appendix I, which bans commercial export of the crocodile or its products except under special circumstan­ces.

In 1999, CITES issued licences to five crocodile farms in Cambodia for limited exports of captive-bred Siamese crocodiles, and on the condition that no wild crocodiles were used to replenish their stock. The exemption provides a quota for exports of the crocodiles and their skins provided farmers can demonstrat­e that their operations do not damage the remaining wild population – not an easy task when high prices give traders, poachers and even park rangers a powerful incentive to catch them.

Hul said CITES registrati­on is crucial do developing a sustainabl­e commercial crocodile farming industry, and provides a legal way for farmers to realise the added-value of selling crocodile skins on the internatio­nal market.

“The crocodile is an endangered species, so as a wildlife protection agreement CITES sets a quota on our crocodile exports in order to protect the species,” Hul explained. “Yet even with CITES protecting the species,cross-bordersmug­gling continues to be a problem.”

He said the legalisati­on of exports could reduce the pressure from smuggling while providing more income to registered crocodile farmers.

“Before we had only five crocodile farms that were recognised by CITES, but now we would like to expand the market in order to match the growth of crocodile farming,” Hul said.

Legal export channels could also push local crocodile farmers to stop the export of live baby crocodiles using Thai and Vietnamese brokers, and instead realise higher value added by selling the skins of fully-grown crocodiles in internatio­nal markets.

According to Hul, baby crocodiles fetch as little as $10 each, while at two to four years a live crocodile can sell for at least $50 to $60. Crocodile farmers can also profit from selling the meat, which fetches about $2 to $2.5 per kilogram.

Nao Thouk, secretary of state at the Ministry of Agricultur­e, and a veteran breeder of Siamese crocodiles, said farmers can make even more by selling the skins of adult crocodiles, which are turned into high-value belts, boots and handbags. He estimated that farmers lose about $100 in potential profit every time they sell a hatchling instead of a mature crocodile.

“The crocodile trade is a huge multimilli­on-dollar market based on the sale of the high-value skins,” he said. “By contrast, our farmers are all too happy to sell the live baby crocodiles, which offer just a small profit and in low demand.”

Crocodile farmer Ly Fem is among the 16 captive-breeding operations whose names were submitted to CITES for licensing. He said the registrati­on process has taken three years already, and he is hoping to complete the procedure soon.

Fem, who has over 3,000 crocodiles on his farm in Krabei Riel commune in Siem Reap province, said crocodile hatchlings at one point were selling for as high as $27 each, but now are fetching as little as $8 on the Thai and Vietnamese market.

“Crocodiles have become so cheap now that farmers cannot make a profit anymore,” he said, adding that CITES registrati­on would help him cut out the middleman.

“If we get CITES approval we will be able to export our crocodiles to internatio­nal markets directly instead of relying on neighbouri­ng countries,” he said. “Without CITES registrati­on our crocodiles will not be recognised as captive-bred specimens, and it will be assumed that we hunted them in the wild or are smuggling them.” THE number of constructi­on projects approved in Cambodia during the first half of the year increased 28 percent compared with the same period last year, amounting to a total value of around $4.9 billion, according to the latest figures from the Ministry of Land Management, Urban Planning and Constructi­on.

The government approved 1,523 projects nationwide between January and the end of June, compared with 1,183 projects for the first half of last year, the ministry announced on its website. The total value of the projects was billed at $4.94 billion compared with $3.87 billion during the same period one year earlier.

Kim Heang, president of Cambodian Valuers and Estate Agents Associatio­n, said that while these figures at face value represente­d positive movement for the sector, he doubted the report’s accuracy in calculatin­g real capital inflows into the constructi­on sector.

“The figures look good, but I still question if that is real money flowing into the sector or if it is just a number to keep on record,” he said yesterday, adding that some developers inflate the value of their projects far above actual constructi­on costs and land prices.

He noted, for instance, that there are projects that claim to be worth $60 million when in fact the developer only has a $10 million plot of land that needs $20 million to develop.

“If this is the case, the money is not being injected into the sector yet,” he said. “They just own the land and have yet to develop.”

Heang added, however, that he believed that real constructi­on activity is steadily increasing, bringing with it more demand for constructi­on materials and supplies.

Koam Bunna, managing director of K Supply, a distributo­r of door locks and accessorie­s, said that the increase of condominiu­m and of f i c e space projects has pushed up sales by 40 percent for the first half of this year. He added that the government figure was a positive sign for sales for the rest of 2017.

“I have a positive view of the constructi­on sector and I believe the demand for constructi­on materials will remain strong,” he said.

Land Management Ministry officials declined to comment on the ministry’s figures yesterday.

 ?? HENG CHIVOAN ?? Crocodiles seen through a fence last week at a crocodile farm in Kandal province.
HENG CHIVOAN Crocodiles seen through a fence last week at a crocodile farm in Kandal province.
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