discussion keeps the world turning this is roundtable brown bears breaking into home Wild boars stopping subway trains.
In 2026, the wild isn't staying in the wild anymore.
China's conservation efforts are working so well, in fact, that animals are showing up where they don't belong.
We'll take a look at what happens when success creates conflict and the new law trying to make coexistence possible.
Coming to you live from our studios in Beijing, this is Roundtable.
I'm Steve.
Thank you very much for being with us today.
And for the show, I'm with Yuxuan and Feifei.
First up.
We used to think of wildlife conservation as a distant effort to save animals in the deep wild, but in 2026 the wild has come to our doorstep.
From brown bears breaking into homes in Qinghai to wild boars disrupting subways in Nanjing,
the boundary between human civilization and nature is disappearing quickly.
And it's not just an animal problem, it's a humanitarian issue and an economic challenge.
Today we are going to talk about the Really kind of complicated issue.
It is affecting us here in China.
It's a world issue as well.
We're going to talk about that too.
And it's a very, very, very tricky line.
Exactly, Steve.
There is a term, actually, about these problems globally.