Word from the CEO: Year-End

Word from the CEO: Year-End

Word from the CEO

 
Yolan Friedmann, CEO

It has been a whirlwind year for the EWT and a pretty good one actually. One could lament the fact that year-on-year our planet has smashed all previous records for the hottest year globally on record, as well as the increase in species under thereat of extinction rising form 68% to 73% according to the latest WWF Living Planet Report. But we choose instead, to celebrate the fact that the EWT significantly increased the protection and status of more than 11 populations of threatened wildlife species; whilst discovering populations of other species thought to be extinct. We directly improved the wellbeing of over 6500 people in rural communities; and ensured the formal (declared) protection of nearly 10 000 ha of critical habitat with another 100 000 ha in the process of being declared.

We also reversed the declining state of nearly 4000 ha of critical habitat through rehabilitation efforts that – at the same time – provided livelihood opportunities for vulnerable people. We know that our natural world continues to suffer from the ravages of unsustainable development, increasing resource use and human population growth, and the EWT Strategy 2025-2050 is a bold and ambitious commitment to revere these trends in some of the most important landscapes across southern and East Africa. We are excited to be embarking on this new growth phase in the years ahead, and look forward to sharing the details of the strategy in the new year.

With the tremendous growth in the EWT over the past calendar year, which saw our pack increasing by 50% and our expenditure on projects and conservation activities by a whopping 12%, the EWT attributes this ability to consistently retain, and increase our positive impact on the status of thousands of vulnerable people, wildlife and the environments that they both share, to the loyalty, ongoing support and passion that our partners, donors and colleagues in the sector all share for our work. Over the past 12 months, our web of impactful partnerships has deepened and widened and now reaches across nearly 20 African countries, ensuring that we share our innovation, skills and knowledge with colleagues far and wide, who are also working to save the wildlife and people that are unique to Africa, to mutual benefit.

As we developed our Future Fit Strategy, we took time out this year to reflect on our journey thus far and benefited from the process of considering what worked for us, what challenges we encountered, what relationships were impactful and where resources could be better applied for maximum benefit. Reflection is a powerful tool that ensures continual learning and entrenches a value system that improves understanding and leads to growth. A key aspect of my own reflection when I look back over 2024, is my deep gratitude to the Board of Trustees of the EWT for their unwavering commitment, support and passion for our work. The leadership of our Chairman Muhammad Seedat and his fellow trustees has steered the ship steadfastly in the right direction, ensuring excellence in our governance, strategy and leadership right from the top. Our Executive Leadership team is a powerful, expert coalition of some of the best conservation minds in the region and we are blessed to be lead and served by them. My heartfelt gratitude goes to every one of them for the individual and collective role that they have played in taking the EWT to great heights this year. The EWT staff: the backbone of the Trust and the energy and innovation behind our tireless work that literally saves wildlife and supports people, right across Africa. You are heroes to many and our secret weapon in the race against extinction.

To all our partners and funders: you are the lifeblood that keeps the EWT at the forefront of conservation excellence. Your continued support and faith in our ability to deliver results keeps us doing what we do best, protecting together forever. Thank-you for the support this past year and always.

 

As we all head off for the much-needed summer holidays – we look back on a year that yielded tremendous results, and forward to a year that kickstarts our most ambitious strategy yet. We are excited about what the next 12 months will bring. We are Future Fit, we are the EWT. Thankyou for being a part of our story.

Wishing all our friends a safe, joyful and peaceful end to 2024 and may 2025 be a prosperous new year for our planet.

Yolan Friedmann,

CEO, Endangered Wildlife Trust

 

A word from the CEO July 2024

A word from the CEO July 2024

Word from the CEO

 
Yolan Friedmann, CEO

The 2024 Summer Olympics kicked off last week with grand fanfare and excitement, with millions of fans globally clenching thumbs and gritting their teeth as they watch their favourite sportsmen and women and wait for records to tumble. With around 300 000 spectators expected to attend the games in person, Paris is buzzing with people from across the globe and from all walks of life. Against the backdrop of political upheaval, unrest, ongoing global conflict in almost all corners of the world, economic uncertainty and a range of other manmade threats to our own futures, it fills me with a sense of hope and excitement to see fans draped in their national flags filling stadiums, and walking the streets of Paris, as they laugh, cheer, applaud and fiercely promote their national pride but all in a safe, harmonious and respectful manner. It makes me wonder why the rest of our lives and the rest of the time people cannot be like this: human beings competing as we love to do, and defending our national positions and ideologies, but in a way that inspires new generations to be better and aim higher, instead of sacrificing their futures. Humans are capable of great achievements and the Olympics is the best celebration of what focus, commitment, hard work and sacrifice can do. In a world that increasingly looks like it will implode due to the devastation of human impact, our planet can also thrive and flourish if people just focused on the RIGHT stuff.

Amidst the celebration of our sporting heroes this week, came the celebration of another group of individuals who can be likened to being environmental Olympians: champions of the earth and guardians of the voiceless. World Ranger Day on the 31st of July is always an opportunity to pause and give thanks to the brave women and men who risk their lives and dedicate their hearts, minds and bodies every day, to protecting the natural world for all of us. With Africa losing more than 64 rangers in the line of duty in the past year and with their work increasingly requiring a range of skills that qualifies them for a pentathlon event of their own, our rangers deserve cheers and glory and podiums every day of their lives. Today’s rangers need to have environmental knowledge, technical skills, self-defense and paramilitary knowledge and still be educators, community developers, managers and defenders of the weak. The EWT salutes ALL rangers everywhere for protecting our earth.

Our world is full of heroes and focusing on them inspires us all to become better and to do better. I love the Olympics and global celebratory days for this reason, and knowing that the heroes of tomorrow are still in the making, gives me hope for a future where we will all indeed be better humans.

Yolan Friedmann,

CEO, Endangered Wildlife Trust

 

A word from the CEO May 2024

A word from the CEO May 2024

Word from the CEO

 
Yolan Friedmann, CEO

On behalf of the Endangered Wildlife Trust Board of Trustees I would like to thank those who took time out of their busy schedules to spend an evening of celebration with us as we look back on our achievements of the past 50 years of conservation in action.  Among our honoured guests were Barbara Creecy, Minister for Fisheries, Forests and the Environment,  David Freeman, First Secretary for Environment, Science, Technology, Health, and Minerals, at the U.S. Embassy Pretoria, the Chair of the EWT Board of Trustees, Muhammed Seedat, past Trustees, donors, associates, colleagues, friends and partners.  But, the guests of honour were two of the EWT founders, Clive Walker and James Clarke, and our previous CEOs Dr John Ledger and Prof Nick King.  

I used to think that 50 years was an inordinate amount of time until I too turned 50 just before the EWT did. I can now assure you that 50 is the new 21 and this was not a celebration of a coming of age, but of a youthful spirit, blended with wisdom, a touch of maturity, a dash of streetsmarts, a helping of hope and a LOT of energy still to be spent to realise dreams that are still big enough to scare us, in the words of Ellen Johnson Sirleaf.

The EWT prides itself on instilling hope, and sharing a vision of what our future can be. We do not like to instil a sense of fear, loss or hopelessness when we talk about our natural world. Instead, we prefer to show, with evidence, the difference we can all make when we work together. You’ve seen firsthand how our work, and with your support, has turned South Africa into the only country in Africa with an increasing population of Cheetah. How Wild Dogs now flourish in Malawi and Mozambique where they had previously gone extinct. How lost species like the Amatola Toad and de Winton’s Golden Mole have been rediscovered and can now be protected. How rivers can flow when invasive plants are removed and how communities can use this water for their livelihoods, their crops and their general wellbeing.

How populations of Blue Cranes and Cape Vultures have been downlisted due to concerted and targeted conservation effort, and how the Brenton Blue Butterfly was the first species to trigger the declaration of a nature reserve to save just one species. How communities now run conservation-friendly enterprises on their land, and rangers, ecowarriors and businesswomen have been borne out of rural children and their mothers. How hundreds of thousands of hectares of critical habitat are now protected, spanning biomes from the Succulent Karoo to the Soutpansberg and covering the lifegiving rivers, grasslands, wetlands, forests and deserts in between.

In 1973, the world had a human population of 3.9 billion. Fast forward to 2024 and the WWF tells us that populations of globally monitored mammals, fish, birds, reptiles, and amphibians have declined by an average of 68%. In Africa alone, the percentage is 66. Our Freshwater systems show the worst, and most rapid decline in quality and species loss. 2023 was the hottest year on record, with extreme weather events causing devastation, globally.

And the world human population has reached 8.1 billion, and is still growing. That is a more than 200% increase in the number of humans and a more than 2 thirds decrease in the number of wild animals left on our planet today. The EWT has done well over the past 50 years. But we have to do more.  

Right now, in the safe havens of our national parks and in our remote wilderness areas and mountain ranges, snares are being set, poisons are being planted and rifles are being loaded. From the African savannahs and deep into our oceans, land is being ploughed up and plastic is being dumped. Rivers are being choked and skyways are stolen from the winged creatures that really do own them.

For 50 years, we have been pushing back the tide and finding solutions; this is the thread that binds us and which continues to blur the generational lines, to form one united EWT. We have literally saved species and changed lives.

As we look to #TheNextFifty, it is important to remember that the world will not be an easier place for much of the planet’s human and wildlife populations. The EWT needs to write a new chapter now, and this book will come with new challenges and opportunities. We owe it to the next generations of brilliant EWTers to continue in the footsteps of our giant founders and to stay connected to the dreams of what we know can be achieved tomorrow.

This we can all do by leaving our future teams a legacy through the establishment of a Fund for the Future that will secure the EWT, our people and our impact, for the wildlife and the communities that they will serve, for decades to still come and for generations not yet born.  

Our Fund for the Future ensures that the EWT never faces the risk of shutting its doors and ending our story, which in many ways, has just begun. We have begun developing our Future Fit Strategy; a powerful, impactful conservation strategy, underpinned by financial security and implemented by high performing teams of the best talent.  It will ensure that we channel our efforts into achieving targets that stretch us and will achieve high impact; that will galvanise cohesive, collective action towards achieving global, and national conservation priorities and which will benefit a maximum range of species, and humans, realistically.

Our Future Fit strategy will simplify our approaches, catalyse new science, engage new partners and embrace a new way of thinking. It will take the EWT into new regions where we will support new partners, and scale our impact. And building on our strengths, it will remain firmly rooted in the core principles of the EWT which are to save species, conserve habitats and benefit people.  We WILL halt the loss of biodiversity. 

Our planet may be ailing, but our spirits are not. We are powerful, passionate and energetic. We have solutions and knowledge and we CAN turn the tide. Together we CAN protect forever.

Thank you for making our birthday so special and for being part of our story.

Yolan Friedmann,

CEO, Endangered Wildlife Trust

 

Word from the CEO: Year-End

A word from the CEO April 2024

Word from the CEO

 
Yolan Friedmann, CEO

The Endangered Wildlife Trust was well-represented at the inaugural Biodiversity Economy and Investment Indaba, themed: “Collective Action for Thriving Nature and People” in Gauteng from 25 to 27 March 2024.  As the EWT’s CEO, I was invited to participate in a panel discussion under the theme of leveraging biodiversity-based features to scale inclusive ecotourism industry growth in seascapes and in sustainable conservation landuse. Along with fellow panellists from the WWF-SA, WildTrust, iSimangaliso Wetland Park and Nature Speaks and Heals, the focus was on what is required to establish mega-living conservation landscapes through voluntary involvement in suitable state, private and community areas.

The crux of the message that I conveyed was that we already have a Biodiversity Economy in South Africa because no economy can exist without food, air, water, energy, soil, plants, animals and all the components of biodiversity that give us life. Our human-constructed financial economy depends entirely on the natural environment and cannot be seen as separate and biodiversity already IS what makes our economy work. Second, I emphasised that humans are a component of biodiversity and also cannot be separated out; we are an integral part of nature, and we need to start talking about humans, biodiversity and our economy in an integrated, interdependent fashion. Third, I emphasised the significance of the responsibility of the current generation which is, to quote Jarred Diamond, the most privileged generation to potentially ever live. The current generation has all the benefits of modern communication, technology, transport, medicine, and cheap food, among others, and whilst the generations to come may benefit more from advancements in these components of life, they will bear the brunt of the disasters of climate change, biodiversity loss, soil erosion, desertification and air pollution, again, among others. We therefore cannot ignore the intergenerational rights enshrined in our constitution which remind us that we are simply the custodians of our environment and are managing it for the generations yet to come. We cannot destroy it all in the pursuit of short-term gains and inequitable financial wealth. For equitable benefit sharing in a sustainably managed environment in which no species go extinct, ecosystems flourish and nature thrives, we need to think creatively about how to invest in nature-positive development options that drive equitable prosperity for all and this should be the crux of the inaugural Biodiversity Economy and Investment Indaba.

After the panel discussions, breakaway sessions were held to unpack options for nature-based job creation, the financing of entrants into the Biodiversity Economy, finding ways to expand investment in the wildlife, biotrade and eco-tourism sectors, as well as the need for skills development and transfer, the acknowledgement and integration of traditional knowledge systems into contemporary conservation practices, and developing a robust strategy to engage and involve communities meaningfully, in policy development and the cocreation of protected areas of the future, to underpin the successful expansion of South Africa’s economy.

The EWT congratulates the Minister of Forestry, Fisheries and the Environment, and her Department, for putting on a highly successful Biodiversity Economy and Investment Indaba

Yolan Friedmann,

CEO, Endangered Wildlife Trust

 

Word from the CEO: Year-End

A word from the CEO February 2024

Word from the CEO

 
Yolan Friedmann, CEO

 

Turning 50 brings with it a level of maturity, wisdom and some well-deserved scars on your back, for most people. For the EWT, it meant galvanising action, stimulating energy and consolidating our plans for a more impactful and far-reaching future for all. We are now at an age that means we can pause for a few minutes, celebrate our numerous victories and reflect on how much we have learned from that path we took; but we are also wise enough to know what we need to learn more, reach further and aim higher if we are to ramp up our impact in the face of declining state of our natural world. Numerous reports are published every year that provide ample evidence of the devastating effect of humans and our unquenchable penchant for transforming the planet beyond the threshold of its natural boundaries, with the results being escalating extinction rates, loss of ecosystem services, the warmest days, and years on record, calamitous weather events, life threatening disease transmission and pandemics, and all in all, reduced human resilience in a world that we are changing faster than most species, humans included, can adapt to.

On 12 February 2024, the Conservation of Migratory Species of Wild Animals (CMS) released its first-ever State of the World’s Migratory Species report which read like a horror story for multiple species whose existence depends on their ability to traverse countries and continents as they have done for millennia, with the changing seasons. The report detailed how nearly 44% of the species listed under the CMS are showing signs of decline and more than 22% are threatened with extinction. Nearly 87% of the fish species listed in the CMS and are threatened with extinction, and the extinction risk for migratory species is growing globally. Humans are doing this to these species, primarily by means of our overexploitation of these species, and the loss of their habitat due to human activity. Climate change, pollution and invasive species are also profoundly impacting most migratory species. In short, humans are killing or removing wildlife from their habitat, at rates faster than they can sustain, and are destroying their habitat and/or making it uninhabitable due to our waste products and greed.

Moving over to the 2024 version of the World Economic Forum annual Risk Report where the picture is not much rosier, even from the perspective of governments and businesspeople and not just scientists. In the 2024 WEF risk report, environmental risks continue to dominate the risks landscape with two-thirds of respondents ranking Extreme Weather as “the top risk most likely to present a material crisis on a global scale in 2024”. Extreme weather has also been viewed as the 2nd most severe risk over the two-year timeframe and nearly all environmental risks feature among the top 10 over the longer term. Younger respondents tend to rank Biodiversity Loss and Ecosystem Collapse, and Critical Change to Earth systems risks far more highly over the two-year period compared to older age groups, with both risks featuring in their top 10 rankings in the short term. Perhaps because they have the most to lose.

Our natural world is not better off as we enter the new year, and with every new year, there is less time to waste. The EWT is spending the first half of our new year rigorously examining our strategic approach, and drafting a cohesive high-level strategy that will see us tackle the most pressing challenges through important goal setting across the thee pillars of saving species, conserving habitats and benefitting people. As a leading conservation agency in southern Africa for five decades, we will continue to remain at the forefront of conservation impact, but we know that our rapidly changing world continually needs new thinking and bigger plans if we are to remain ahead of the extinction tide. We are not afraid of the challenge and we invite you to join the journey of Protecting Forever, Together as you have done for the past fifty years. We cannot rewrite history, but we can influence the future and for us, saving forever starts today.  

May your year ahead be one of prosperity and peace; thank you for being part of the Next50.

Yolan Friedmann,

CEO, Endangered Wildlife Trust

 

A word from the CEO December 2023

A word from the CEO December 2023

Word from the CEO

Yolan Friedmann, CEO

 

From the earliest documented history of human life on Earth, mankind has interacted with nature through a variety of systems and relationships. Though not formalised in its practice by early man, one could contend that our use of, and engagement with nature for food, cover, tools and cultural or religious practice over millennia, form the underpinnings of what would lead to what we could call conservation today.

As hunters and gatherers, humans who depended directly on natural resources for their survival, controlled and managed access to natural resources through systems of religious beliefs and the use of resources by traditional healers. In Africa, there were superstitions against killing certain species like hyena, hammerkop or chameleon and people were prohibited from hunting or eating their totem animals. Scarce or valuable products were given to their leaders as gifts. Areas were demarcated for specific purposes, like religious or tribal gatherings and these included sacred forests, burial sites and hills for ceremonies and rituals. Human beings have therefore been assigning restrictions to the use of various animals, plants and areas for all sorts of reasons since the dawn of time.

But humans have also been increasingly exploiting the planet’s resources, and as human populations have grown, so have our use – and overuse – of many thousands of species, and our depletion of natural systems, globally. To the point where rates of extinction on the planet have been escalating and now threaten to unravel the very fabric of this gloriously diverse, richly wild planet of ours. In response, what has now become known as the Environmental Movement has become a planetary force of its own.

Around the start of the last century, environmental discourse became more formalised and was characterised by issues which map the storyline, such as soil erosion in the 1930s, urban smog in the 1950s, chemicals in the 1960s, resource depletion in the early 1970s, nuclear power in the late 1970s, acid rain in the early 1980s, and the recognition of global ecological issues like ozone depletion and climate change today, documenting a shift in identifying environmental issues from those with local dimensions and impacts to those that form a picture of a planet in peril. It is largely recognised that the Stockholm Conference (United Nations Conference on the Human Environment) held in 1972 was the catalyst of formal environmental protection activities globally, and the 1970s were a busy time with a slew of multilateral environmental agreements entering into force, such as wetland conservation (Convention on Wetlands of International Importance/Ramsar, 1971), wildlife trade (Convention on the International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora/CITES, 1973) and migratory species (Convention on the Conservation of Migratory Species/CMS, 1979).

Signifying increasing internationalisation of environmental issues and a growing realisation that resources are limited and require controlled utilisation and compliance mechanisms to ensure their sustainability. It is against this backdrop that, back on African soils, an intrepid trio of conservation visionaries recognised the plight of Africa’s iconic wildlife and in 1973, embarked on a journey to raise some money, and direct it all into saving perhaps one of the most iconic of all wild animals, the African Cheetah. Little did Clive Walker, James Clarke and Neville Anderson know then, that their desire to safeguard the future of the world’s fastest land mammal would evolve into the establishment of one the most effective bastions of the conservation of Africa’s wild spaces, wild animals and the communities that depend on both, over the following half a century.

Towards the end of 2023, the Endangered Wildlife Trust will celebrate 50 years of Conservation in Action. In the fifty odd years that have passed since the world kickstarted the environmental movement, countries have signed more and more environmental agreements and millions of community and civil society organisations have been established to empower people and rally society to save our planet – ironically, from ourselves.

However, our planet is not better off for much of what has been done in the past fifty years and many hundreds of thousands of species have been declared extinct during this time. Before we assume that this cannot be possible, consider just this: researchers have identified that it is possible that 15% of the world’s 1.25 million mite species had been lost by the year 2020, so for this one taxon alone, we’re talking tens to hundreds of thousands of extinctions, a number that researchers predict will continue to rise. Add this to the numerous species of orchids, freshwater fish, amphibians, bats, insects, succulents, trees, reptiles, lichens, mammals and birds that have also been declared extinct in recent times, and one can understand why the race against extinction is not just a catchy phrase.

Turning the tide on extinction is what the EWT has been dedicated to doing, since its inception. For many species our work will perhaps never be done, and they may rely on the relentless focus of the future generations of EWTeam members for The Next Fifty and beyond. But their persistence in their natural habitats, as critical components of the ecosystems that give us all life, is cause for celebration that trumps the EWT just turning half a century old. In fact, 50 years is barely a blip on the screen when one considers for how many millennia these species, that humans have doomed to oblivion, took to evolve, and how their essential role in shaping all lifegiving systems on earth, will now be lost forever. Fifty years is really nothing when it comes to nature, so instead of looking back when we celebrate this milestone, the EWT will be focussing on the Next Fifty and The Next Fifty and beyond. We need to be both future fit as an organisation, with the right skills, capacity, resources and ideas to ensure our own survival, and prosperity; and we need to be keeping a watchful eye on what the future may hold and what that means for the wildlife and wild places, that may need us in decades to come. Many species and ecosystems may be quite common or intact today but with a changing climate, increased pollution, ongoing habitat transformation, deforestation and desertification, over-harvesting and let’s face it: increasing human population size which means more and more resource consumption and landuse change, who knows what the future holds for Mother Nature.

Some man-made threats to wildlife, like overharvesting, human-wildlife conflict and land transformation have not changed for centuries, they have just escalated in terms of scope, scale and speed. Futurists, quoted in New Scientist, suggest that we consider threats like genetically engineered viruses, mass offshore power production, demand for the biomass to make biofuel, synthetic bacteria and biomimetic robots, and when we add this to the loss of pollinators, escalating violence and wars, climate refugees, the possibility of nuclear warfare and ramped up climate-related natural disasters, the future world becomes a tricky place for bees, butterflies and bats.

Fortunately, in the past 50 years the EWT has transitioned from working on large mammals only. to addressing the threats facing all of these species, and more. We are proudly working to save the most expansive and diverse list of species and ecosystems in Africa and to be working among the most diverse variety of communities and stakeholders, from big business and rural farmers to traditional healers and school children. What has not changed in 50 years is our responsiveness to change and those in need. Being future fit is also about resilience internally and the EWT is addressing this by nurturing younger talent, modernising our operating systems, and securing our own persistence, through our Fund for the Future. This will ensure that the EWT will be around for many more celebrations like this, and to provide a lifeline for the species, communities and natural systems that need our help.

Please take a moment to page through the 2023 version of the EWT’s Integrated Report. You will come across many examples of how the EWT’s approach to conservation has successfully secured the future of numerous species from frogs and golden moles brought back from the edge of extinction to increasing populations of cheetah, cranes and Wild Dogs in South Africa. You will note our robust framework for measuring impact and our continual use of innovation to push knowledge boundaries and generate better results. We hope that you take pride in our growth in both budget and funding spent on projects. We trust that you will celebrate with us, the highs and lows of a year in which global turmoil escalated, and humanity clawed its way back from pandemics and socio-economic instability. But also, a year in which those with passion, commitment, and a calling to safeguard our planet for generations not yet born, were rewarded with results that pack these pages and give us hope.

It has been my privilege and honour to serve at the helm of the EWT as one of only four CEOs in 50 years, for the past 17 years. Prior to this, the EWT was led by great names in conservation like Dr Nick King (2003- 2006), Dr John Ledger (1985 – 2002) and of course Clive Walker (1973-1985). Together, with many wonderful people who have gone on to become legends in their own right, we have all had a chance to co-mingle our own life stories into that of the EWT and conservation in Africa. For the generations that will still come, and those who will next pick up the baton. May you write a narrative for The Next Fifty that brings back more life to this planet, keeps our African night skies clear and our savannahs bustling with life.

The EWT began as a flicker of light from a small match struck 50 years ago and today, we burn brightly through the torches carried by all our staff, our trustees, our partners, our associates, our invaluable donors, our communities, our fans and our friends. Without you all, we can only look back, but with you, we embrace the future, robots and all, and stride onward to #TheNextFifty.

Yolan Friedmann,

CEO, Endangered Wildlife Trust