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Posted 20 Feb 2025

2 min read

Study titled ‘Delineating the environmental justice implications of an experimental cheetah introduction project in India’ uses Project Cheetah as a case study to exemplify broader issues applicable to rewilding and restoration projects.

  • Project Cheetah aims to establish African cheetahs in India, where the Asiatic subspecies went extinct.
  • 20 cheetahs were introduced to Kuno National Park (KNP), but high mortality rates (40% adult, 29.4% cub) and health concerns have impacted the project.

Key issues highlighted with Project Cheetah

  • Ecological mismatch: Significant differences in climate, prey, and habitat between India and Africa pose challenges for long-term cheetah survival.
  • Stressful conditions: Frequent chemical immobilizations induce severe stress in cheetahs.
    • Most survivors remain captive; no established free-ranging population exists in KNP.
  • Unsustainable Cheetah imports:  African cheetah populations are already vulnerable (approx. 6,500 mature individuals).
    • Reliance on annual imports of 12 cheetahs is unsustainable and raises ethical concerns.
  • Unfair social impacts:  Due to minimal involvement of local communities and past displacements of indigenous people for conservation.

Key Recommendations

  • Study calls for Justice-informed approach for a more participatory and inclusive conservation model.
    • Kunming-Montreal Global Biodiversity Framework emphasizes equity and justice in conservation.
  • Local knowledge: Respect local knowledge systems to focus on sustainable coexistence between humans and wildlife.
  • Tags :
  • Project Cheetah
  • Kuno National Park
  • Environmental Justice
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