You are talking the difference between operating on a game Ranch in countries with pretty good infrastructure... compared to very large wild government concessions in countries where the infrastructure is not as good ...Another distances are great...this includes getting fuel and supplies etc in......So don't go trying to compare ....and as for the model of conservation.... As I said you are comparing two totally different types of operations..... Maybe one day when unfortunately the big wild concessions are no more due to population explosion... then I suppose the game ranching scenario you so love as its cheap will possibly become the norm ....if the legislation is in place to allow it....but I hope the big wild concessions are around for as long as possible.... And I also hope there keep on being people who can afford to hunt these places.....
That is true. The differences explained well.
Large concession blocks, remote areas, logistics, etc.
But why not having Namibia model, in other countries? There is game ranching, and there is wilderness of Caprivi strip, and pricing accordingly?
Of course, provided legal frame to allow such types of operations
Another thing to consider, which model of conservation is more succesfull? Game ranching, or maintaining wilderness areas? Number of white rhinos in Namibia and RSA, speak well plus few other species.
In overall all human wildlife conflict, uncontrolled encroachment, poaching, etc ... all over the continent, my impression is that game ranching is model for the future.
I understand that in modern World there is no free lunch. Everything costs, economy is driving machine in all industries, but I am also not sure,that 100k full bag safari, affordable to maybe 1% or less of declining international hunters population is the only way, as applied.
Simply put, i dont see it as long term self sustainable. Especially in situatiation where number of hunters is in decline, hunting elite in decline as well... in western countries where elite hunters are coming from (more and more celebrities, politicians are against hunting, etc).
Lets compare it to car industry, rolls rolls is nice, but middle class affordable cars, that make numbers, sales, profitabilty, end employment rates makes the difference. Like Ford philosophy.
It is not that I "love so much" game farming, but to me it made African hunting affordable, to me and to 90% of other visiting hunters.
And when we speak of foregin cash income, there was a table somwhere on this forum, where is very much visible the differences of annual revenue from hunting industry per country in subsaharan africa, in reality comparing economic results of two different approaches. So my educated guess is game ranching has more succes in conservation of the species, but also in annual revenues.