San Francisco is set to receive a pair of pandas from China, continuing Beijing’s famed “panda diplomacy.” It will be the first time that the beloved animals will be hosted long-term in San Francisco, following a yearlong advocacy campaign led by Mayor London Breed. The announcement was made in Beijing on Friday, with officials from the China Wildlife Conservation Association (CWCA) present. San Diego had previously announced that they too would be receiving two pandas earlier in the year. China, being the only natural habitat for pandas, loans the animals to other countries as a means of diplomacy and wildlife conservation.

Mayor Breed expressed the city’s excitement about welcoming giant pandas to the San Francisco Zoo and signed a letter of intent for international cooperation on giant panda conservation. The city had been working with its Chinese and Asian communities to advocate for the pandas for almost a year leading up to an Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation leaders’ meeting in November 2021. CWCA Secretary General Wu Minglu stated that the association will work closely with San Francisco officials to prepare for the pandas’ arrival and ensure the technical standards for their conservation. The pandas are expected to arrive in San Francisco in 2025.

This announcement follows San Diego’s recent news that it would be receiving a pair of pandas, making it the first time in over two decades that China has agreed to send pandas to the United States. Currently, there are only four giant pandas in the U.S., all located at the zoo in Atlanta. China had not renewed loan agreements at zoos in Washington, D.C., and Memphis, Tennessee in recent years, leading to concerns that it was ending its historic panda diplomacy with Western nations due to geopolitical tensions. Pandas have long been a symbol of friendship between the U.S. and China, dating back to when Beijing gifted a pair to the National Zoo in Washington, D.C., in 1972 before the normalization of bilateral relations.

The announcement of San Francisco receiving pandas comes ahead of a planned visit to China by U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken next week. Diplomatic exchanges between Washington and Beijing have increased in recent months in an effort to ease tensions, although disagreements still exist on issues such as trade, national security, and conflicts like Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and the Israel-Hamas war. The loan of pandas by China to the U.S. serves as a gesture of goodwill and cooperation between the two countries, showcasing the importance of wildlife conservation and cultural exchange in international relations. The arrival of pandas in San Francisco will undoubtedly be a momentous occasion for the city and its residents, symbolizing a strengthened bond between the U.S. and China through the power of panda diplomacy.

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