Our Story

Elephants were dying and people were hungry. We trained poachers to farm and provided a market where there was none.

In the 1980s wildlife populations in Zambia’s Luangwa Valley were ravaged by poaching. At the peak of the poaching epidemic, thousands of elephants were killed annually. It is estimated that within twenty years from the early 1970s to the early 90s, elephant populations in this region dropped by over 30,000. During this time the black rhino, which had previously existed in healthy numbers in the Luangwa Valley, went extinct.

 

Poverty and hunger

Meanwhile, villagers in the Luangwa Valley were struggling to make ends meet. Extreme poverty and remote conditions meant most people lived a subsistence lifestyle. Poor agricultural practices resulted in nutrient-drained soils and small yields. Pests attacked what meager crops were harvested, and many families went hungry. With no other choice, villagers turned to wildlife poaching to feed their families. “Bushmeat” was harvested and traded many miles away for food or small amounts of cash, and ivory was sold on the black market. With no other markets available, poaching was the only source of income for villagers of the Luangwa Valley.

At the time, the only strategies addressing poaching were punitive. A limited number of wildlife rangers identified, arrested, and imprisoned poachers. But incarcerating a poacher meant sentencing his family to hunger as well. With the loss of the family’s main provider, many women were left vulnerable to exploitation. And in the 80s, at the height of the AIDS epidemic in Zambia, the stakes were very high.

 

The COMACO Model

Our founder, a wildlife biologist, saw an opportunity. He asked what if, instead of imprisoning poachers, we trained them to farm, and provided a market for their crops. In 2003, COMACO started a pilot program working initially with 24 of the most notorious poachers in the Luangwa Valley. Poachers were taught basic practices in soil conservation and drought resistance and supplied with high-quality seeds and basic farming tools. In exchange, they agreed to stop poaching and surrender their guns. Soon, hundreds of poachers were approaching COMACO’s field staff offering to surrender their weapons for a similar chance to change their lives for a better life. The model was working.

Today, COMACO works with over 225,000 farmers across Eastern Zambia. We purchase and transport crops from remote regions, where few other buyers will reach, and pay premium prices to give farmers the value they deserve. We then process the crops into high-quality food products and sell them across Zambia under our brand It’s Wild! Profits are returned to our farmers through continued support and programming of COMACO activities and actual payouts called conservation dividends if compliance to conservation is demonstrated. As a result, food security levels have dramatically increased across the region, and slowly but surely elephant populations are returning to the Luangwa Valley.

What We Do

COMACO Causes

Women’s Empowerment

Our field staff learned early on that when women are included in farmer trainings, those households

Manufacturing as a Tool for Conservation

We supply over 8,000 tons (and increasing) of nutritious food products to Zambia’s cities and town

Carbon Project

We began working in partnership with local chiefs to establish Community Conservation Areas designed

Cooperatives

We helped establish 80 community-run cooperatives across Zambia’s Eastern Province, which provide

Transformed Poachers

In 2003 when COMACO started its operations in Luangwa Valley, our mission was to help wildlife poach

Agroforestry

In the 2020/2021 season in Eastern and Muchinga provinces we partnered with 72,000 farmers to plant