The choice is yours: How buying ivories kill off elephants
80 elephants die everyday because of ivory.
To raise awareness among Asian consumers that the high level of poaching that’s driven by Asia’s ivory trade will kill off African elephants by 2025, JWT Singapore created a unique website that shrinks in size every 10 seconds, highlighting the species’ rapid decline.
Behind this project is, Let Elephants be Elephants (LEBE), an organization founded by TV host Nadya Hutagalung and elephant expert Dr. Tammie Matson which aimed at reducing the number of people buying ivory in Asia. Users pledge to share one fact about elephants and their plights from the LEBE website on the their Facebook page to stop the decline. Currently, there are over 6,781 people worldwide who have made their pledges against buying ivory.
Part of this campaign is creating a documentary that highlights the connection between rising levels of elephant poaching in Africa and the consumption of Ivory in Asia, which aired on National Geographic. And just recently, the organization released the first of three webisodes which can be viewed through their youtube channel. The first webisode focuses on the plight of baby orphaned elephants at the David Sheldrick Wildlife Trust in Nairobi.
According to LEBE, in the 1980s, it was primarily the US, Europe and Japan that were the main markets for ivory driving a poaching spree on elephants in Africa. Today it’s Asia, due to rising wealth, especially China and Thailand. “Many other countries participate in ivory buying and transport, facilitating a multi-million dollar illegal trade that is devastating the world’s last wild populations of elephants. Recent studies show that when people link the ivory they buy to the wild elephants that have to be killed to provide it, they stop buying.”
The purpose of LEBE is to draw attention to this issue and to encourage all to take the pledge never to buy ivory. The campaign want any concern individual to share the facts to keep the elephants alive, know the truth about ivory, understand the consequences of ivory purchases and how long have elephants got left.
According to LEBE, every 20 minutes, one more elephant dies because of ivory - that's 80 elephant deaths a day and 30,000 elephants killed every year. LEBE also indicated that we only have 11 years to make a change that’s why they call to share a fact or pledge to stop the decline.
The video link is here.
Do you have interesting social ads which caught the emotions of many Singaporeans? Send details of your projects to Lee Anne Babierra at research@charltonmediamail.com