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  • About NCE
    • What we do
      • News
      • About Us
      • Objectives
      • Programme Areas
      • Council
      • Calendar
      • Opportunities
    • Funding & Facilities
      • Apply for NCE Grant
      • Grantee Reports
      • NCE Bursary Fund
      • NCE Documents
      • Vehicle Booking Form
      • Cessna Aircraft Booking Form
    • People & Sponsors
      • Members
      • Become a Member
      • Sponsors
      • Executive Committee
      • Staff
      • Interns & Postgraduates
  • Resources
    • Statements
    • Interviews
    • Newsletters & Bulletins
    • Hot topics
    • Symposiums & Meetings
    • Conservation Magazine
    • Books
    • Best Practice Guides
    • Pangolin Working Group resources
    • » The EIS
  • Working Groups
    • Namibian Carnivore Working Group
    • Namibian Invasive Alien Species Working Goup
    • Namibian Pangolin Working Group
    • Namibian Wildlife Lead Poisoning Working Group
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Dunes
Leopard
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conservation of the natural environment

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the protection of indigenous biodiversity

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Leopard
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the protection of endangered species

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environmental best practices and rehabilitation

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the development of young Namibians

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Read about the Namibian Pangolin Working Group

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The Namibian Chamber of Environment (NCE) is an umbrella Association that provides a forum and mouthpiece for the broader environment sector, that can lobby with government and other parties, that can raise funds for its members and that can represent the sector.

Recent News

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New and updated content on this website:

Heinrich SK et al. 2016. Feliform carnivores have a distinguished constitutive innate immune response
WG resource: Updated Friday, December 16, 2022
Frigerio D. et al. 2018. Citizen science and wildlife biology: Synergies and challenges.
WG resource: Updated Friday, December 16, 2022
Castro-Prieto A et al. 2011. Diversity and evolutionary patterns of immune genes in free-ranging Namibian leopards (Panthera pardus pardus)
WG resource: Updated Friday, December 16, 2022
Castro-Prieto A et al. 2011. Cheetah paradigm revisited: MHC diversity in the world's largest free-ranging population
WG resource: Updated Friday, December 16, 2022
Durant SM et al 2016. The global decline of cheetah Acinonyx jubatus and what it means for conservation
WG resource: Updated Friday, December 16, 2022
Edwards S et al. 2019. Evidence of a high-density brown hyena population within an enclosed reserve
WG resource: Updated Friday, December 16, 2022
Edwards S et al. 2019. First confirmed record of infanticide for wild brown hyena
WG resource: Updated Friday, December 16, 2022
Edwards S et al. 2020. Socioecology of a high-density brown hyaena population within an enclosed reserve
WG resource: Updated Friday, December 16, 2022
First steps towards the development of epigenetic biomarkers in female cheetahs (Acinonyx jubatus)
WG resource: Updated Friday, December 16, 2022
Giese L et al. 2021. Using machine learning for remote behaviour classification—verifying acceleration data to infer feeding events in free-ranging cheetahs
WG resource: Updated Friday, December 16, 2022
Stein A et al. 2011. Namibian national leopard survey
WG resource: Updated Friday, December 16, 2022
Weise FJ et al. 2017. The distribution and numbers of cheetah (Acinonyx jubatus) in southern Africa
WG resource: Updated Friday, December 16, 2022
Stein AB et al. 2011. Leopard population and home range estimates in north-central Namibia
WG resource: Updated Friday, December 16, 2022
Portas R et al. 2021 GPS telemetry reveals a zebra with anthrax as putative cause of death for three cheetahs in the Namib Desert
WG resource: Updated Friday, December 16, 2022
Paijmans JLA et al. 2021. African and Asian leopards are highly differentiated at the genomic level.
WG resource: Updated Friday, December 16, 2022
Noack J et al. 2019. Leopard density estimation within an enclosed reserve
WG resource: Updated Friday, December 16, 2022
Krücken J et al. 2021. Genetic diversity of vector-borne pathogens in spotted and brown hyenas from Namibia and Tanzania relates to ecological conditions rather than host taxonomy
WG resource: Updated Friday, December 16, 2022
Klein K et al. 2021. Visual analytics of sensor movement data for cheetah behaviour analysis
WG resource: Updated Friday, December 16, 2022
Kambongi T et al. 2021. A description of daytime resting sites used by brown hyaenas (Parahyaena brunnea) from a high-density, enclosed population in north-central Namibia
WG resource: Updated Friday, December 16, 2022
Fischer H et al. 2022. A preliminary comparison of brown hyaena activity patterns at den sites located within a protected reserve and a commercial farmland
WG resource: Updated Friday, December 16, 2022

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Where NCE stands on...

Harvesting of hardwood timber in North Eastern Regions of Namibia and associated deforestation

The NCE is deeply concerned about the current commercial harvesting of slow-growing hardwood trees in the north east of Namibia (mainly Kavango East and West, northern Otjozondjupa and Zambezi).

» Read more
Botswana's engagement with communities over elephant management

We, as Namibian conservationists, including environmental NGOs, researchers, community representatives and conservancies, hereby join a group of international conservationists in voicing our support for Botswana’s consultative process to address the challenges associated with managing its large elephant population. We applaud President Masisi and Botswana’s parliament for establishing the consultative process that looks to balance wildlife conservation with the needs and aspirations of the citizens of Botswana.

» Read more
The zero pilchard and sardine quota announced in December 2017

The Namibian Chamber of Environment would like to congratulate the Namibian Cabinet and the Ministry of Fisheries & Marine Resources for making this important decision. We recognise that the Ministry is sometimes placed in a difficult position, and has to weigh up fish resource sustainability with business interests and jobs. However, it is important that the health of the fish resource must take priority.

» Read more
The US President’s decision to abandon the Paris Climate Agreement

Namibian civil society deplores the US President’s decision to abandon the Paris Climate Agreement.

US President Donald Trump announced on Thursday 1 June 2017 that the United States, one of the world’s largest emitters of greenhouse gases that cause climate change, will withdraw from the Paris Climate Agreement.

» Read more
Hunting and tourism in Namibia

Well-managed hunting is extremely good for conservation. In many areas, it is essential for conservation. 

Hunters and tourism operators should and must be on the same side – to make land under wildlife more productive than under other forms of land use. They are natural allies.

» Read more
The capture of marine animals for the aquarium trade

NCE firmly supports the environmental clauses in the Namibian Constitution, including the sustainable use of natural resources for the benefit of all Namibians, both present and future. However, the Chamber is opposed to the capture of rare and endangered marine animals for the aquarium trade for the following reasons...

» Read more

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