Major blockchain analytics firms, crypto companies, and tech giants are teaming up to fight the global illegal wildlife trade, which is estimated to be worth up to $23 billion each year. The effort was announced at London Climate Action Week by Prince William’s United for Wildlife program.
Chainalysis, TRM Labs, crypto exchange Luno, and PayPal are among the organizations involved. They aim to find and break up the financial networks that support wildlife trafficking worldwide.
This partnership is a key moment for the crypto sector. While digital assets are often linked to illegal finance, the group shows how blockchain transparency can help track crime. Public blockchains keep permanent records, making it possible to analyse and trace transactions, even though many people think crypto is fully anonymous.
The group will focus on a key part of the money trail: turning crypto into regular currency. Criminal groups often use centralized exchanges to cash out digital assets. These exchanges must follow anti-money laundering rules and verify customers, giving investigators a chance to spot suspicious activity.
Chainalysis has a lot of experience with blockchain investigations and has helped law enforcement track billions in illegal crypto transactions worldwide. TRM Labs focuses on real-time monitoring across many blockchains, helping authorities follow money as it moves between digital networks.
The effort also involves tech companies like Google, Meta, TikTok, and Alibaba, who plan to use AI to spot and remove wildlife trafficking from their platforms. Telecom companies such as Vodafone, Vodacom, and Safaricom will improve monitoring on mobile payment networks.
The United Nations Environment Programme says wildlife trafficking is one of the world’s biggest illegal industries and puts about one million plant and animal species at risk. Supporters think that using blockchain, AI, and private-sector resources together could seriously disrupt trafficking networks.
Experts admit that criminals still use privacy tools to avoid detection, but this coalition shows that blockchain forensics are becoming more important for law enforcement worldwide. The project also shows how the crypto compliance sector is maturing and taking on bigger real-world challenges, not just financial crime.
Tech, crypto firms to help tackle illegal wildlife trade https://t.co/MjDuHNQPMB https://t.co/MjDuHNQPMB
— Reuters (@Reuters) June 22, 2026
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