Thousands of elephant tusks are being piled high into pyres as Kenya prepares to torch its vast ivory stockpile hoping to stop trafficking and prevent extinction of elephants in the wild. 
Time is running out: at current rates of elephant killing, conservationists warn large herds of elephants will be wiped out within decades from all but the most protected of parks. 
Following a regional summit today to boost awareness of the threat of poaching and push efforts to end trafficking of ivory entirely, Kenya will take the symbolic step of torching almost the entirety of its stores, seven times the size of any stockpile destroyed so far. 
The mass burning tomorrow will see Kenyan President Uhuru Kenyatta destroying 105 tonnes of ivory, representing over 6,700 elephants - or some 5% of global stores. 
Another 1.35 tonnes of rhino horn will also be burned. 
It is a grand statement: on the black market, that quantity of ivory could sell for over $100mn, and the rhino horn could raise as much as $80mn. Rhino horn can fetch as much as $60,000 per kilo, more than gold. 
But Kenya dismisses any suggestion that the tusks have value - apart from for the elephants. 
“We don’t believe there is any intrinsic value in ivory, and therefore we’re going to burn all our stockpiles and demonstrate to the world that ivory is only valuable on elephants,” said Kitili Mbathi, director general of the Kenya Wildlife Service (KWS). 
Africa is home to between 450,000 to 500,000 elephants, but more than 30,000 are killed every year on the continent to satisfy demand for ivory in Asia, where raw tusks sell for around $1,000 a kilo. 
In Tanzania, the elephant population has slumped from around 110,000 in 2009 to just 43,000 in 2014, according to official statistics. 
On the frontline of the war against poachers, in which armed guards battle gangs armed with assault rifles, Kenya has seen improvements: a total of 93 elephants were killed in 2015, compared with 164 in 2014, government figures show. 
The other battle is to stamp out the trade itself, and send a message to those who still want to buy ivory. 
Malaysia burned almost 10 tonnes of ivory seized from smugglers earlier this month, in an unprecedented and symbolic move. In west Africa, Cameroon followed days later by torching six tonnes of ivory, a first for the country. 
The Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES) banned the ivory trade in 1989, and activists say destroying the stocks will help put anti-trafficking efforts at the top of the agenda at the next CITES conference in September. 
“Ivory is worthless... on every metric - culturally, ecologically and economically -- and in all cultures living elephants are valued over their dead teeth,” said Alex Rhodes, who heads the Stop Ivory group. 
Conservationists argue fiercely that the value of an elephant alive, in terms of the income it brings in through tourism, is worth far more. 

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