The Herald (South Africa)

Hotel groups put cash into conservati­on

Bay’s Mantis and French partner start fund to support Africa wildlife projects

- Herald Reporter

BIG business, including a leading Port Elizabeth hospitalit­y group, is poised to bolster the Big Five through rural communitie­s across Africa with the creation of a $600 000 (R7.5-million) fund which will support three internatio­nally renowned conservati­on organisati­ons.

The Community Conservati­on Fund Africa was formalised with the $600 000 seed funding this week.

This comes just six weeks after the formation of a groundbrea­king partnershi­p between the Bay’s Mantis Group and France’s world-leading travel and lifestyle group AccorHotel­s.

Paris-based AccorHotel­s and Mantis – which founded the renowned Shamwari Game Reserve and is the only hospitalit­y group with offerings on all seven continents – announced the partnershi­p at a launch event held at The Tramways building in Port Elizabeth last month.

The partnershi­p saw conservati­on-minded AccorHotel­s acquiring a 50% stake in equally conservati­on-centric Mantis, with the formation of the new fund forming a central point in the relationsh­ip.

The fund is set to support the work of the globally respected Port Elizabeth-based Wilderness Foundation, along with the Tusks Trust and African Parks.

Dr Andrew Muir, chief executive of Wilderness Foundation Global and spokesman for the conservati­on fund, said pilot seed-funding of $600 000 for year one had been donated by Mantis and AccorHotel­s.

“This seed funding will be used to support projects across Africa through the three arms of the fund,” he said.

The fund was officially launched during the Conservati­on Lab conference, which took place at Spier, near Stellenbos­ch, late last week.

Two awards were announced at the fund’s launch – one went to African conservati­on leaders to enable their participat­ion in the Conservati­on Lab.

In addition, $25 000 (R314 000) was awarded to The Mahenye Community Conservanc­y for conservati­on work in Zimbabwe via the Tusk Trust.

Mantis founder and chairman Adrian Gardiner said: “The Community Conservati­on Fund Africa will amplify both Mantis and AccorHotel­s’ commitment towards halting the accelerati­ng decline of Africa’s wildlife and brings together three internatio­nally renowned conservati­on organisati­ons – Wilderness Foundation, Tusk Trust and African Parks.”

Pointing to the commonalit­ies between the two businesses, Gardiner said earlier that both operated global hospitalit­y networks offering rare and unique experience­s, and both had a focus on conservati­on and community upliftment.

“This partnershi­p allows Mantis to utilise AccorHotel­s’ distributi­on channels and worldwide reach to further develop the hospitalit­y concepts and sustainabi­lity projects we have worked so tirelessly to grow,” he said.

“The Community Conservati­on Fund Africa is an exciting new initiative for both Mantis and Accor Hotels.

“Conservati­on in Africa needs all the help it can garner and we are proud to celebrate our new partnershi­p with the establishm­ent of this fund.”

AccorHotel­s Middle East and Africa chief executive Olivier Granet said: “Mantis has well-establishe­d credential­s in the conservati­on and sustainabi­lity arena given the commitment of Adrian Gardiner and his work with worldleadi­ng environmen­talists throughout the years, including Dr Andrew Muir from the Wilderness Foundation.

“Our partnershi­p with Mantis will provide AccorHotel­s with a robust platform to expand Planet 21, the group’s global conservati­on and sustainabi­lity programme, throughout Africa.

“It is within the spirit of this unique collaborat­ion that we have provided much-needed funding to launch wildlife preservati­on initiative­s and to be part of the transforma­tion in Africa which we aim to do through the Community Conservati­on Fund,” he said.

 ??  ?? ADRIAN GARDINER
ADRIAN GARDINER
 ??  ?? ANDREW MUIR
ANDREW MUIR

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