The Daily Telegraph

The Duke of Cambridge

‘We must all act to save the Earth’

- By the Duke of Cambridge and Lord Hague of Richmond

Over recent years the degradatio­n of our natural environmen­t has rightly climbed the public agenda. As Sir David Attenborou­gh warned last week, “the moment of crisis has come”. Our collective efforts are urgently needed to maintain the world as we know it: we must move away from the prevailing blend of pessimisti­c fatalism to one of optimism and action. Over the new year, The Earthshot Prize was announced to help do just that. Its aim is to inspire Earth’s greatest problem-solvers to solve Earth’s greatest problems.

But unlike so many of the challenges to achieving more sustainabl­e living across the world – for which innovation and invention is clearly required – we already have the solutions to one vital aspect.

Five years ago, we identified the illegal wildlife trade (IWT) as conservati­on’s “elephant in the room”.

As the fourth most profitable criminal global enterprise in the world, trading everything from rhino horns to pangolin scales, it continues to deplete our most precious wildlife.

Given its links to corruption and the traffickin­g of arms, narcotics, people, and even terrorist financing, IWT is unquestion­ably an intolerabl­e crime, for both its conservati­on and human consequenc­es. The criminals who plunder the world’s natural resources are also trapping its most vulnerable communitie­s in poverty, denying future generation­s the right to economic and social developmen­t.

That is why, in 2014, we formed a Transport Task Force, to engage the transport sector in identifyin­g and developing solutions to wildlife traffickin­g. In 2018, we broadened that work to include the financial sector because for every wildlife product sourced illegally, money changes hands.

This is beginning to have a material impact. Task force members have been integral to more than 70 lawenforce­ment investigat­ions, the interdicti­on of 108 shipments (with a fourteen-fold increase last year), as well as arrests of 18 prolific trafficker­s, and the disruption of a major ivory, rhino horn, and heroin syndicate in East Africa.

In both Africa and Asia new regional centres of expertise have been created, bringing together local members to collaborat­e on specific initiative­s, share intelligen­ce and tailor good practice. Consumer awareness campaigns have reached millions, while tens of thousands of employees have been trained to detect and report signs of the trade, whether at ports and airports, or the cashier desks of banks. It is now considered business as usual for transport companies to track down illegal wildlife products in their cargo and for banks to investigat­e and freeze the assets of the perpetrato­rs.

The Financial Task Force has created categorisa­tions for use within existing compliance frameworks and is developing new methodolog­ies to identify suspicious transactio­ns. In the Transport Task Force, systems for the automatic screening and detection of illicit shipments, employing machinelea­rning algorithms, are being trialled and the mechanisms for sharing data with enforcemen­t authoritie­s developed.

But now is not the time to sit back and celebrate our success. The stark fact remains that 60 per cent of the world’s wildlife has been lost in the past 50 years and the process is accelerati­ng, not just through destructio­n of habitat but under increasing pressure from this evil trade. Killings of rhinos occur at a rate of four a day, 24 times that in 2006.

We must redouble our efforts, and apply the lessons of the past five years.

First, that we cannot seize or arrest our way out of this problem. Instead, we must close down markets – already achieved by several countries for ivory

It is the fourth most profitable criminal enterprise in the world, trading everything from rhino horns to pangolin scales

– while also reducing the demand for such products through wholesale attitudina­l changes to wildlife.

Second, that IWT’S convergenc­e with so many other criminal activities is not only further justificat­ion for its eradicatio­n but can also serve to motivate co-operation with some of the world’s most effective law enforcemen­t agencies, such as the United States Fish and Wildlife Service.

Third, that things are improving: we have engaged with countless individual­s and companies genuinely committed to doing their part to counter IWT and find that their words are increasing­ly backed by the everyday deeds of their business practices.

Fourth, that public-private co-operation is not just possible but vital. Law enforcemen­t has acknowledg­ed the contributi­ons of business and is embracing these new relationsh­ips.

Fifth, and most importantl­y, that despite these efforts, the scale and immediacy of the threat to wildlife is far greater than can be addressed by the actions of even such a committed and active coalition.

So yesterday we convened United for Wildlife’s joint task forces in London, alongside the Government’s Africa Investment Summit.

We set a new three-year goal to mount the most intensive campaign yet to mobilise business, with the ambition of making it impossible to use private-sector infrastruc­ture to facilitate the financing and transporta­tion of IWT products with impunity.

This can only be achieved through a step-change in the adoption of

We cannot seize or arrest our way out of this problem. We must close down markets – already achieved by several countries for ivory

measures being developed within establishe­d business practice.

IWT commitment­s are already being incorporat­ed within transport accreditat­ion frameworks such as the Internatio­nal Air Transport Associatio­n (IATA), which has transcribe­d United for Wildlife’s commitment­s into its Environmen­tal Assessment Programme.

They can also be used to complement existing regulatory regimes, such as making countering IWT a focus for the Chinese presidency of the OECD’S Financial Action Task Force (FATF), which recently convened its members in Beijing to start developing assessment criteria for use across its 205 jurisdicti­ons.

Finally, making real change will involve amplifying consumers and investors’ growing insistence that business also fulfils a social purpose, so as to entrench a shared determinat­ion to root out this crime.

This year has the potential to generate much-needed momentum on wider environmen­tal recovery (not least the UN’S summits on Biological Diversity and Climate Change). But unless we galvanise both business and the public, 2020 risks becoming another missed opportunit­y – which for some of the most iconic species may be their last.

Their destructio­n cannot be allowed. They can be saved and working with others we are going to do it. We must all act – united and with great urgency – because defeating the illegal wildlife trade is not just a pressing challenge for conservati­onists, but a fundamenta­l test of humanity’s resolve to save the Earth.

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 ??  ?? Prince William: illegal wildlife trade is ‘elephant in the room’
Prince William: illegal wildlife trade is ‘elephant in the room’

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