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Aceh builds 80km of electric fence to deter jumbos
Published on: Sunday, February 15, 2026
Published on: Sun, Feb 15, 2026
By: Antara News
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Aceh builds 80km of electric fence to deter jumbos
A herd of wild Sumatran elephants in a resident’s plantation in Negeri Antara village, Pintu Rime Subdistrict, Bener Meriah District, Aceh. (Pic: Antara)
ACEH: Authorities in East Aceh District have built nearly 80 kilometre’s of electric fencing in remote areas to reduce escalating conflicts between wild elephants and villagers, an official said.

Muhammad Ishak, head of Peunaron Subdistrict, said 79.92 kilometre’s of low-voltage “elephant shock” fencing has been installed across six villages in Peunaron and neighboring Serbajadi Subdistricts.

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The project is a collaboration between the East Aceh district government, the Natural Resources Conservation Agency and the Leuser Conservation Forum, he said in East Aceh on Friday.

In Peunaron, fencing spans Sri Mulya Village for 11.5 kilometres and Arul Pinang for 30.71 kilometers.

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Additional sections cover Peunaron Village for 9.26 kilometres and Peunaron Baru for 5.63 kilometers.

In neighbouring Serbajadi, fences extend 9.72 kilometres in Bunin village and 13.37 kilometres in Arul Duren Village, Ishak said.

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The fencing is intended to mitigate negative interactions between residents and the protected Sumatran elephants that frequently enter farmland and plantations in the forested region.

Authorities have also opened a wildlife conflict complaint post at the Peunaron subdistrict office after prolonged reports of elephant incursions into residential and agricultural areas.

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In addition to elephants, villagers have reported tigers preying on livestock, prompting broader mitigation efforts to prevent casualties among residents and protected wildlife, Ishak said.

He urged community members and local stakeholders to support the complaint post as a central reporting hub and an early response mechanism to manage wildlife encounters.

Ishak expressed hope the electric fencing would serve as a boundary to deter elephants from damaging crops and plantations while minimizing harm to the animals.

Human-wildlife conflict is a recurring issue in parts of Aceh Province bordering the Leuser Ecosystem, one of the last habitats of critically endangered Sumatran elephants and tigers.

The Indonesian government has listed Sumatran elephants among the critically endangered mammals in the country.

As per figures published on the official website of the World Wildlife Fund (WWF), the population of Sumatran elephants is estimated to be about 2,400–2,800 individuals.

The world’s leading organization on wildlife conservation and endangered species has said that ivory can still be found in markets around Africa and Asia, as well as in the United States and Europe.

The WWF has noted that poaching for the illegal ivory trade remains a serious threat to the lives of wild elephants in several countries.  
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