elephant
File photo of Wild elephants at Nagrijuli Tea Estate. Photo: Northeast Now

Concerned over the ever-increasing incidents of man-elephant conflict in Assam, the Indian Tea Association (ITA) has called for a meeting in Kolkata to consider an industry-wide collaboration to address human-elephant conflict faced by the tea gardens of Assam.

The meeting was initiated by Chairman of Apeejay Tea, Karan Paul. Paul, a member of ITA, has been implementing conflict mitigation strategies with WWF for the last three years to significant impact.

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WWF presented a strategy to the ITA members and success stories of its three-year collaboration with Apeejay Tea during the meet, which saw participation of 15 top tea companies and senior management of WWF.

โ€œApeejay Tea was perhaps the first tea company to fund an intensive conflict management strategy in Sonitpur because four of our gardens were in the hot zone. As a donor as well as a victim of human elephant conflict, the successes of Apeejay Teaโ€™s partnership with WWF-India for the last three years have brought us valuable insights on solutions to human elephant conflict issue,โ€ said Paul.

โ€œWe have shared these with the Indian Tea Association and hope to see a multi-party collaboration that will lead to the development of a broad human-elephant conflict management protocol followed by all tea gardens uniformly,โ€ he said.

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ITA Chairman, Vivek Goenka said that the ITA has studied the project outcomes of Apeejay Tea-WWF collaboration and is sensitive to the issue. โ€œI believe that a multi-stakeholder collaboration including the government will aid implementation of large-scale interventions across the tea sector .Today was our first meeting involving tea companies,โ€ Goenka said.

Director, Species and Landscapes programme, WWF-India Dr Dipankar Ghose said, โ€œWith the support of multiple stakeholders such as the Apeejay Tea, Assam Forest Department, elected public representatives, civil administration, and local communities, WWF-India has been utilizing multi-pronged approaches to address human-elephant conflict. We believe that we will be able to scale up these initiatives in Assam with the Indian Tea Associationโ€™s participation.โ€