‘Is it “woke” to care about the environment?’: how Trump’s cuts are
dismantling global conservation work
Hundreds of projects supported by USAID have been thrown into doubt, as
fears grow of an increase in crimes such as poaching and trafficking
Patrick Greenfield, The Guardian
April 1, 2025
See link
https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2025/apr/01/trump-cuts-wildlife-conservation-usaid-aoe
for photos.
When the guns finally fell silent in 1992, little was left alive in
Gorongosa national park. During the 15 years of Mozambique’s civil war – in
which more than a million people died – the country’s wildlife also paid a
terrible price. Poaching for meat and ivory was so intense that the small
surviving elephant population rapidly evolved to lose their tusks.
Leopards, wild dogs and spotted hyenas had all disappeared. Populations of
zebra, buffalo and other herbivores had collapsed.
In the following years, a huge effort to restore the park took shape. Led
by the philanthropist Gregory Carr and Mozambique’s government, it was the
start of the park’s journey to becoming one of Africa’s most celebrated
wildlife conservation success stories. Today, elephants, lions, hippos,
antelope, painted wolves, hyenas and leopards all thrive in the park once
again – thanks to work that for the past 20 years has been supported by a
long-term partnership with USAID.
But now, Gorongosa is among hundreds of conservation projects around the
world thrown into uncertainty by Donald Trump’s budget cuts to USAID and
other branches of the American government. Experts warn the cuts could
cause a global surge in wildlife trafficking and poaching, as support for
schemes protecting critically endangered species has ended.
From combating illegal fishing in the Galápagos islands to backing
anti-rhino poaching initiatives in east Africa, the US government has been
one of the largest funders of conservation around the world, providing, on
average, 12.1% of the world’s biodiversity funding between 2015 and 2022,
according to the OECD.
But the Trump administration’s cuts and funding reviews have forced many to
reduce ranger patrols and critical restoration work, leaving vulnerable
species with dramatically diminished protection.
Speaking to the Guardian on the condition of anonymity, conservation NGOs
say the cuts have resulted in job losses and an immediate scaling back of
projects, prompting concern for the future of the species they were meant
to protect. None believes the shortfall can be made up from other funding
sources.
“These funding cuts could not have come at a worse time. The loss of US
funding means an immediate reduction in rangers protecting wildlife on the
frontlines,” says one wildlife trafficking expert, who did not want to be
named. “We were already experiencing rapid growth in trafficking of live
wildlife, jaguar canines and bone products as substitutes for tiger from
Latin America; an expanding illegal trade of elephant ivory in southeast
Asia; an uptick in rhino poaching in southern Africa; and professional
tiger poaching groups targeting tigers.”
Another, also requesting anonymity, says: “Efforts to prevent the illicit
trade in high-value wildlife products also disrupt the transnational crime
cartels driving the illegal trafficking of narcotics, people and weapons.
Demand and the illicit money for wildlife products largely originates from
China, and the consequences of slackening existing controls is terrifying.”
Through USAID, the US Fish and Wildlife Service, the US Forest Service and
the Bureau of International Narcotics and Law Enforcement, the American
government has supported a vast network of conservation initiatives,
averaging about $740m a year of direct assistance between 2015 and 2022,
according to the OECD. Schemes range from helping Indigenous communities to
secure formal land rights to helping to tackle illegal logging and gold
mining in the Amazon. USAID alone provided at least $350m in 2023 for
conservation initiatives, making it one of the largest funders in the
cash-strapped sector, and was often matched by contributions from
philanthropists and the private sector.
Mark Freudenberger, an environmental expert who has worked on USAID schemes
for more than 30 years, says that while it is too early to know the
immediate effects of the cuts, he fears there will be a rise in poaching
and encroachment in national parks in the coming years.
“I’m very concerned about the future of lemurs in Madagascar; white rhinos
and elephants in southern Africa; gorillas in Rwanda, Congo and the Central
African Republic; orangutans in south-east Asia. The list goes on, and it
is long. These species are of great intrinsic value to the global
community,” he says.
Organisations working to strengthen the voice of Indigenous communities in
the Amazon and African were among those to lose funding. Marcia Wong, a
former USAID administrator for humanitarian assistance, says it is likely
that they have fallen foul of efforts to crack down on diversity, equity
and inclusion (DEI) schemes.
“Working with Indigenous communities was seen as DEI. That’s too ‘woke’ for
this administration. It makes me sad. If you care about the environment, I
don’t think that’s woke. I think that’s being conscious of the future and
it also makes America safer,” says Wong, who was a Democratic political
appointee under Biden.
Projects that have not yet received a final decision about their funding
have had to fill in a survey to explain how their work contributes to the
US government’s interests and supports US sovereignty. The survey includes
questions about how they work to protect women and children from “gender
ideology”, with a link to Trump’s 20 January executive order rolling back
transgender and gender-identity rights. The review process extends until 19
April.
Matthew Hansen, a professor at University of Maryland and an expert on
remote sensing, says USAID funding of conservation has been critical for
soft power. In recent years, his team has worked on improving monitoring of
the Congo basin rainforest, the world’s second largest, to reduce
deforestation threats.
“Some people seem to believe our international engagement should only
consist of guns, Bibles and the occasional Band-Aid. Unfortunately, we have
not defended, nor advertised, more substantive interactions that create a
world of global engagement and partnership, which is what USAID does,” he
says.
“Being a generous and concerned partner with other countries in their quest
to develop stable, participatory political systems, human development,
conservation of nature and institutions that serve their populations across
a range of needs, should remain a critical national mission for the United
States. It is incredible that we are purposefully withdrawing from such
interactions when they are most needed,” he says.
https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2025/apr/01/trump-cuts-wildlife-conservation-usaid-aoe