Red pandas in a tree, for article on red panda conservation area

Nepal opens first community-based red panda conservation area 

A small municipality in Nepal’s eastern hills has done something no local government in the country has done before: declared a community-managed forest as a protected conservation area specifically for red pandas. The 116-hectare zone in Ilam Municipality now gives legal recognition and structured governance to the effort to save one of the world’s most beloved endangered mammals.

At a glance

  • Red panda conservation area: Ilam Municipality declared 116 hectares of temperate broad-leaved forest in the Puwamajhuwa area as Nepal’s first community-based conservation zone dedicated to Ailurus fulgens, incorporating two existing community-managed forests.
  • Community oversight: A management committee representing local forest user groups, Indigenous peoples, pastoral families, and local and provincial governments will govern the area under a formal management plan.
  • Wild population: Fewer than 15,000 red pandas are estimated to remain in the wild globally, with around 500 living in Nepal’s bamboo-rich hill forests — making every protected hectare count.

Why this moment matters

Red pandas are listed as endangered on the IUCN Red List and included in Appendix I of CITES, the international wildlife trade convention. That means their trade is globally prohibited — yet poaching continues. Research suggests hunters still kill them for their pelts even when no active market exists, largely because awareness of the animal’s protected status remains low in some communities.

Habitat loss compounds the threat. Unplanned road construction and hydropower development in Nepal’s eastern hills have fragmented the forests these animals depend on. Red pandas range across India, Nepal, Bhutan, and China, and every patch of intact habitat matters to their long-term survival.

What makes the Ilam declaration different from top-down protected area designations is where the authority comes from. Following Nepal’s 2015 C.E. constitution, municipal governments gained sweeping powers over local natural resource management — including forests, watersheds, and wildlife. Ilam Municipality used that power to create a legal framework, publish the required procedure, and then formally declare the conservation area. The entire process was locally driven.

A community with history on its side

“Red pandas were abundant here; not only did they inhabit the forests, they would also occasionally venture into the village,” said Heman Sunuwar, chair of Ilam Municipality Ward No. 3. “Our community has a history of helping these red pandas return to the wild.”

That history of grassroots involvement is exactly why organizations like Red Panda Network and the Rainforest Trust provided technical assistance to help Ilam formalize its plans. “This is exemplary work by the local government,” said Haris Chandra Rai of Red Panda Network. “Conservation is not easy, and it takes a lot of time. To make conservation effective, we need to put in significant effort.”

The conservation area’s management plan covers habitat protection, forest fire prevention, invasive species control, research and monitoring, and ecotourism development. Mayor Kedar Thapa has pointed to ecotourism as a meaningful opportunity — one that could connect conservation directly to local livelihoods, giving community members a tangible economic stake in the red panda’s survival.

Local governance as a conservation tool

Nepal’s political history adds texture to this milestone. During the decade-long Maoist insurgency from 1996 C.E. to 2006 C.E., local governments were effectively suspended and run by appointed bureaucrats. Elections were impossible under the threat of violence. The 2015 C.E. constitution’s restoration and expansion of local authority marked a genuine turning point — and Ilam’s red panda conservation area is one of the more striking examples of that authority being used for ecological ends.

The model has precedent. In May 2022 C.E., the Ghodaghodi complex in western Nepal’s Sudurpashchim province became the country’s first bird sanctuary declared by a provincial and municipal government working together. Community-level conservation designations are becoming a quiet pattern in Nepal.

Still, challenges remain. Enforcement across 116 hectares of forest terrain will require sustained commitment and resources, and awareness campaigns about red pandas’ protected status will need to reach communities well beyond Ilam’s borders. The declaration is a beginning, not a guarantee.

But in a country where fewer than 500 of these animals roam free, a locally governed, legally recognized, community-run conservation area — with Indigenous peoples and forest user groups holding seats at the table — is a meaningful step in the right direction.

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For more on this story, see: Mongabay

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