Transboundary Support

Many key African conservation landscapes are transboundary, because wildlife don’t recognize human borders—and neither do threats to wildlife. In transboundary landscapes, we work to strengthen capacity and collaboration between wildlife authorities, communities, and other conservation-minded people on both sides of the border. We facilitate workshops to develop a long-term vision, agree on information-sharing strategies, advise on joint patrols along borders, and help plan movement corridors and dispersal areas for wildlife.

See one case in Zimbabwe and Zambia
Boat on Zambezi River

These results come from EU-funded activities from 2018-2021, with percentages representing achievements against set targets.

97% Success enhancing capacity of scouts in Zimbabwe

100% Human-wildlife conflict mitigation success in Zimbabwe

25-50+% Estimated drop in human-wildlife conflict in areas with chili technology