FILE - Female panda Jin Bao Bao, named Lumi in Finnish, plays in the snow on the opening day of the Snowpanda Resort in Ahtari Zoo, in Ahtari, Finland, Saturday Feb. 17, 2018. (Roni Rekomaa/Lehtikuva via AP), File)
Lumi the Panda playing in the snow (Picture: AP)

A zoo in Finland has given up two giant pandas because they have become too expensive for the facility to maintain amid declining visitors.

The private Ahtari Zoo in central Finland said on its Facebook page the female panda Lumi, Finnish for ‘snow’, and the male panda Pyry, meaning ‘snowfall’, will return to China eight years earlier than planned.

The panda pair were China’s gift to mark the Nordic nation’s 100 years of independence in 2017 and were supposed to be on loan until 2033.

But since then the zoo has experienced a number of challenges, including a decline in visitors due to the 2020 coronavirus pandemic as well as an increase in inflation and interest rates, the facility said in a statement.

The panda deal between Helsinki and Beijing had been finalised in April 2017 when Chinese President Xi Jinping visited Finland for talks with Finland’s then-president Sauli Niinisto.

The pandas arrived in Finland in January 2018.

The zoo even built a special panda annex costing around £6.7 million in the hopes of luring more tourists to the remote nature reserve.

But the upkeep of Lumi and Pyry, including a preservation fee to China, cost the zoo some 1.5 million euros (£1.25 million) annually.

FILE - Male panda Hua Bao, named Pyry in Finnish, rolls in snow during the official opening of the Ahtari Zoo Snowpanda Resort in Ahtari, Finland, Saturday, March 3, 2018. (Tommi Anttonen/Lehtikuva via AP, File)
Pyry the Panda at the private Ahtari Zoo (Picture: AP)

The bamboo the giant pandas eat was flown in all the way from the Netherlands.

The Chinese embassy in Helsinki noted to Finnish media that Beijing had tried to help Ahtari to solve its financial difficulties, including by urging Chinese companies operating in Finland to make donations to the zoo and supporting its debt arrangements.

However, declining visitor numbers combined with drastic changes in the economic environment proved too high a burden for the smallish Finnish zoo.

The panda pair will enter into a month-long quarantine in late October before being shipped to China.

Finland, a country of 5.6 million, was among the first Western nations to establish political ties with China, doing so in 1950.

China has presented giant pandas to countries as a sign of goodwill and closer political ties, and Finland was the first Nordic nation to receive them.

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