What is happening now?
We, the PanEco Foundation and our Indonesian sister foundation YEL, are about to officially launch a new project that is unique in the world so far. For almost 30 years, we and our local partners have been rescuing mainly young, orphaned orangutans from illegal pet ownership or from the wildlife trade. Almost all of them have been successfully released into the wild after a few years of care and training. But some animals have been so badly injured and traumatised that they can no longer be released.
The Orangutan Haven will become the new home for these impaired orangutans. At the same time, it is an environmental education centre teaching about rainforest, illegal wildlife trade and sustainable development. Now the first orangutans are being relocated from the Quarantine and Rehabilitation Centre to the islands in the Orangutan Haven.
Why your support is important
We now need your support to make the move happen as quickly as possible. The Government of Indonesia has set a tight deadline for the first animals to be relocated. Never has such a relocation been carried out and nothing must go wrong in this phase. This requires, for example, very well qualified personnel who closely monitor the behaviour of the orangutans. The islands for the orangutans also need to be better equipped to be species appropriate. Please help us to cover the initial costs of the project!
Why do we need the Orangutan Haven?
Some of the orangutans we have rescued are so badly injured that they cannot be released back into the wild. Until now, they have lived in closed enclosures in our Quarantine and Rehabilitation centre. But these animals have already experienced so much suffering that they deserve a better life. For more than five years, we have been working with local partners to build the Orangutan Haven, a globally unique, innovative project to enable the orangutans to live in naturalistic environment. In addition, the Orangutan Haven raises awareness among people of different ages about protection of the wild species and their habitat, the tropical rainforest. By the end of January 2024, eight orangutans will move into large, naturally vegetated islands surrounded by moats within the Orangutan Haven. Here, they will find trees, ropes, climbing structures and nesting platforms in the open air instead of the caged enclosures they previously inhabited.