To this end, we have set up a Land Acquisition Fund, to ensure that we have the funds available when strategic land comes onto the market. This funding target is set to match our previous Land Acquisition Fund received in 2020, which enabled us to make highly strategic decisions. This urgently needs to be matched so we can expand the biodiversity conservation frontier and critical wildlife corridors which support the entire ecosystem within the K2C biosphere.
2. LAND REGENERATION
FUNDING TARGET – US$800,000.00 (±R15,000,000.00)
Nature knows how to regenerate herself – it is our role to promote this regeneration by dismantling damaging processes and implementing supportive ones. Permaculture, a design system based on natural laws, enables us to do this.
The application of Permaculture Design Principles allow for the creation of productive, ecologically stable landscapes together with the living communities thereon. It is a management strategy that assesses the available natural resources and the state of the environment (water cycle, nutrient cycle, succession, and energy flow) whilst assimilating the human needs and deliberately integrating various elements to nurture a diverse, healthy, and ever-growing ecosystem. With a regenerative mindset, Permaculture converts negative human impact into a positive contribution with lasting, productive action, helping to transform the consumer driven era into a life-affirming model that consciously promotes life in all her forms, naturally leading to a state of abundance.
Our immediate and long-term vision is to create flourishing ecologically sustainable environments throughout our organisation. Although the initial capital investment is relatively high, Permaculture becomes very cost-effective over time, as closed-loop systems begin to utilise outputs from one function as inputs for others, working with Nature to ensure enduring ecological sustainability.
- Sunlands Permaculture Hub: The Trust’s recent land acquisition in 2022 was highly strategic in stopping an extensive industrial citrus farming development from contaminating the arterial Klaserie river, which serves a vast section of the Kruger National Park. The Trust now protects over 12.2km of river frontage, and has secured the water rights well beyond the needs of our planned operation, at a volume of 19,860,000 litres per annum, which amounts to an additional cost of R398,000.00 per annum. Our intention is to keep the water in the river, and not allow the extraction rights to be sold to potential exploitative businesses upstream. Sadly, the developers had already cleared over 200 hectares of indigenous bushveld in their preparations to plant citrus trees. This land now needs regenerative support as, if left unsupported, a full-scale monoculture of sickle bush (an indigenous pioneer tree) will take over, greatly reducing the potential biodiversity of the land, becoming inhospitable to humans and animals alike. Our vision is to create a Permaculture Hub and Biodiversity Appreciation Centre surrounding the existing dilapidated building complex, and to pioneer a 200-hectare Indigenous Food Forest system on the degraded land. In time this will be opened to the Greater Kruger Park system, becoming a viable product yielding forest as well as an oasis for the varied biodiversity that would be welcome to traverse the space.
Capital required for 5 years of creating the Sunlands Permaculture Hub amounts to R10,000,000.00. This hub will serve as a future income centre for the Trust, providing ethically processed indigenous medicinal and nutritional products to the high-end lodges in the area. In addition, we will be able to supply these valuable products at affordable prices to our underserved local rural communities who currently have little to no access to these health promoting agro-products. Furthermore, the hub presents an opportunity to transfer these agro-processing skills to community members.
3. LAND PROTECTION
FUNDING TARGET – US$270,000.00 (±R5,000,000.00)
Each of our properties has a different risk profile and until we achieve a world in which lions, land and people flourish in harmonious coexistence, we need to ensure the protection of Nature and her sentient beings. At the Global White Lion Protection Trust we achieve this through three fundamental strategies: daily celebration of Nature, construction and maintenance of our fences (“force-fields of love”) to ensure the land’s safety, as well as effective counter-poaching interventions. While the first strategy carries no cost, the other two are financially onerous on the Trust.
- Our force-fields of love (Fencing): The Trust has installed so-called predator-proof fencing on the perimeter of our borders to ensure our Lions’ safety, as well as the protection of other wildlife populations, creating a “force-field of love” around their Kingdom. To date, more than R12,000,000.00 has already been invested into the installation of these security and protection measures. The use of high-spec materials, solar-powered electrification and modern construction methods also allows for better management of other wildlife populations.
The fences require daily inspections and continued maintenance to ensure that the force-field of love is never dropped. The combined exterior fencing for our properties amounts to almost 73 km, and this excludes the acclimation and relief bomas on each property, the Kenyan fencing around all camps and the corridor fencing erected to reduce the risk of lions reaching national roads.
The Trust’s annual costs for necessary upgrades and maintenance (excluding new installations) of fences amounts to almost R500,000.00 per annum. This amount will vary depending on various land acquisitions and the state thereof.
- Counter-poaching teams: In our area, poaching has reached pervasive proportions. Generally, poachers are either highly organised and well resourced, targeting specific animals such as Lion, Rhino and Pangolin for the illegal global trade or they are poorly resourced and highly opportunistic, setting snares and hunting with dogs for ‘bush meat’ to be sold to the local communities. Both present a huge threat to the safety of the wildlife in our region. Proactively clearing snares and monitoring roads, fencelines and river crossings, the counter-poaching units play a vital role in ensuring the protection and safety of our sacred White Lions and all the other species living on their Land.