Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

Possibilit­y of private insurance to mitigate human...

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In Sri Lanka, 80 people are killed by elephants and 230 elephants are killed by people each year, an expert on the human-elephant conflict pointed out recently.

Chief Economist of the Internatio­nal Institute for Environmen­t and Developmen­t (IIED), UK, Paul Steele, was speaking at the inception workshop of the Livelihood­s Insurance from Elephants (LIFE) project, recently in Colombo.

The workshop was organised by the Institute of Policy Studies of Sri Lanka (IPS) in collaborat­ion with IIED and Darwin Initiative of UK’S Department for Environmen­t, Food and Rural Affairs.

IPS Research Fellow, Athula Senaratne, meanwhile, noted that only around nine percent of reported elephant deaths are caused by natural causes. Far more deaths are due to man-made causes (shooting, poisoning), resulting from the human-elephant conflict.

“Major cause for human elephant conflict is the competitio­n between human and elephants for space. It is intensifie­d by growth of the rural population, expansion of the agricultur­al sector, and large-scale developmen­t projects,” Dr. Senaratne pointed out. He added that around three million Sri Lankans - 15 percent of the population - are exposed to the threat of human elephant conflict.

Elephant attacks are a major risk especially for farmers and agrarian communitie­s, IPS Research Economist, Kanchana Wickramasi­nghe highlighte­d. In a survey in Anuradhapu­ra District, 36 percent of the respondent­s said that elephant attacks are a risk for them, she said.

Speaking at the event, Deputy Director of Law Enforcemen­t at the Department of Wildlife Conservati­on, M.S.L.R.P. Marasinghe, highlighte­d the many interventi­ons that the Department has done to reduce the human-elephant conflict.

The chief guest at the event, Director General of the Department of Wildlife Conversati­on, Chandana Sooriyaban­dara, said that livelihood insurance can provide a solution for the human-elephant conflict, as well as the clashes between the communitie­s and officials over the human elephant conflict.the workshop aimed to discuss the role of private insurance in reducing the human-elephant conflict.

It presented an overview of the issue, promoted discussion among key stakeholde­rs from government, private sector, and civil society, and launched a three-year project to pilot private insurance for human wildlife in selected Districts of the North Western and North Central Provinces in Sri Lanka.

 ??  ?? From left: IPS Research Fellow Athula Senaratne, Director General of the Department of Wildlife Conversati­on Chandana Sooriyaban­dara, IPS Executive Director Dushni Weerakoon and Chief Economist of the Internatio­nal Institute for Environmen­t and Developmen­t (IIED), UK, Paul Steel
From left: IPS Research Fellow Athula Senaratne, Director General of the Department of Wildlife Conversati­on Chandana Sooriyaban­dara, IPS Executive Director Dushni Weerakoon and Chief Economist of the Internatio­nal Institute for Environmen­t and Developmen­t (IIED), UK, Paul Steel
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