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The Department of Forestry, Fisheries and the Environment (DFFE), under Minister Aucamp, has published a notice of intention to set and allocate the 2026 and 2027 CITES export quotas for elephant, black rhinoceros, and leopard hunting trophies.
The proposed annual quotas for both 2026 and 2027 are as follows:
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- Elephant: A quota of 300 tusks, derived from no more than 150 individual elephants. The DFFE states the national wild population is approximately 43,681 and growing at 5.5% annually, making an offtake of 0.35% to 0.7% sustainable.
- Black Rhinoceros: A quota of 12 hunting trophies (allocated as 3 D.b. bicornis, 8 D.b. minor, and 1 D.b. michaeli ). The DFFE notes this complies with CITES resolutions allowing an export of up to 0.5% of the population of each subspecies to incentivise habitat protection and remove surplus males.
- Leopard: A quota of 11 leopard hunting trophies. These are limited to 11 specific designated zones across KwaZulu-Natal, Limpopo, Mpumalanga, and the North West. Hunting is restricted to male leopards 7 years of age or older in areas with stable or increasing populations.
Concerns
Concerns regarding the accuracy of the population counts used to justify the quotas, particularly for elusive, free-roaming species like leopards.
Moral objections to the practice of trophy hunting, arguing that sentient, endangered, or vulnerable animals should not be killed for sport.
Questions about whether the revenue generated from high-value trophy hunts actually reaches grassroots conservation efforts and local rural communities, or if it remains largely with private outfitters.
Concerns that targeting the largest or oldest males (e.g., large-tusked elephants or dominant leopards) negatively impacts the gene pool and the social structures of the remaining populations
The potential reputational damage to South Africa’s broader eco-tourism and photographic safari industry.
Questions and answers
Minister Aucamp is required by law to consult the public before finalising the international export quotas for these specific hunting trophies for the 2026 and 2027 calendar years.
No. The quota is for 300 tusks, which equates to a maximum of 150 individual elephants per year.
Yes, the South African leopard population is classified as “Vulnerable” under the IUCN Red List. The DFFE states the quota of 11 leopards is based on an adaptive management approach, restricting hunts only to males 7 years or older in specific zones with stable or increasing populations.
The proposed quotas (Gov Gazette)
Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora
In the News
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- News24 — SA trophy hunting export quotas revived after four-year freeze
- WIO News — South Africa to Permit Rhino, Elephant Hunts & Trophy Exports Again
- 2Oceans Vibe — Leopards Quietly Make A Major Comeback On The West Coast
- 2Oceans Vibe — Big Changes Coming For Hunting Tourism In SA
- The South African — Elephant tusks back on the export list? SA proposes new hunting quotas
- Travel and Tour World — Big Game Tourism of South Africa: New Hunting Quotas Proposed to Revive Forty-Four Billion Rand Industry
- World Animal News — Urgent: South Africa’s Draft Hunting Quotas Threaten Rhinos, Elephants & Leopards—Your Voice Is Needed!
WION. South Africa has announced plans to permit elephant and rhino hunts again, reviving trophy export quotas and opening public consultation on black rhino hunting permits. The move has sparked fresh debate over conservation, wildlife management, and ethical hunting.
Daily Bagel. South Africa’s hunting export quotas are back on the table – weeks after a ministerial reshuffle – reopening a fierce debate about conservation, politics, and money.
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