Market Data: Environmental
Cost of tiger bone wine in China
According to WWF Investigators, a bottle of “tiger-bone wine” sold in Western China on the border of Burma/Myanmar sold in 2008 for $88.
The wine is believed to give the drinker increase health.
Source: AFP, “Myanmar a gateway for wildlife trade to China: report,” Google News, March 16, 2010.
- No Comments » |March 16th, 2010
- Tags: Burma/Myanmar, China, prices, tigers, wildlife smuggling
Number of sharks killed each year
According to environmental groups, up to 73 million sharks are believed to be killed each year. The sharks are killed primarily for its fins to be used in soups, with most of the trade heading to China.
Source: Associated Press, “Shark protection plan defeated,” MSNBC, March 16, 2010.
- No Comments » |March 16th, 2010
- Tags: China, sharks, wildlife smuggling
Illegally traded Rhino Horns
According to international organizations, between 2006 and 2009 around 1,500 Rhino Horns were illegally traded.
- No Comments » |March 15th, 2010
- Tags: rhino, wildlife smuggling
Rhinos killed in South Africa in 2009
In 2009, 122 rhinos were killed by poachers in South Africa.
- No Comments » |March 15th, 2010
- Tags: rhinos, South Africa, wildlife smuggling
Wildlife trade from Vietnam into China
An estimated 3,000 tons of wildlife meat is consumed and exported into China from Vietnam each year.
Source: “Over 2 tons of wildlife and animal bones seized,” VietNam Net, March 11, 2010.
- No Comments » |March 12th, 2010
- Tags: China, Vietnam, wildlife smuggling
Rate of killings for elephants due to poaching
More than 8 percent of the world’s population of elephants are being killed each year due to poaching, according to a conservation biologist at the University of Washington.
- No Comments » |March 12th, 2010
- Tags: wildlife smuggling
Examples of the rate of wildlife product seizures
During February 2010, Italian officials in Rome seized 30,000 wildlife products while searching through the luggage of more than 3,000 passengers.
Source: AFP, “World cops target traditional healers over smuggled wildlife,” Google News, March 5, 2010.
- No Comments » |March 5th, 2010
- Tags: Italy, wildlife smuggling
More tigers in farms than in the wild in China
In 2010, there were only 50 tigers believed to be roaming in the wild versus 5,000 tigers raised in tiger farms in China.
Source: Patrick Winn, “Can Vladimir Putin save the world’s tigers?,” GlobalPost, February 24, 2010.
- No Comments » |February 24th, 2010
- Tags: China, wildlife smuggling
Illegal fishing of the bluefin tuna
The International Commission for the Conservation of Atlantic Tunas reported that illegal fishing accounted for over half of all catches of bluefin tuna in the Eastern Atlantic Ocean and Mediterranean Sea.
Source: Dane Klinger and Kimiko Narita, “Foreign Policy: Saving The Sushi Menu,” NPR, February 17, 2010.
- No Comments » |February 17th, 2010
- Tags: illegal fishing
Ban on Tiger Bones costs China millions
An official with China’s wildlife conservation agency stated to the Wall Street Journal that the global ban on tiger bones and parts created losses of $337 Million to the ancient medicine industry in the country.
Source: Shai Oster, “China’s Tiger Farms Spark a Standoff,” Wall Street Journal, February 12, 2010.
- No Comments » |February 11th, 2010
- Tags: China, wildlife smuggling

