The Environmental Crime Crisis

Given the alarming pace, level of sophistication, and globalized nature that illegal trade in wildlife has now notoriously achieved, UNEP initiated a Rapid Response Assessment to provide some of the latest data, analysis, and broadest insights into the phenomenon.

A RAPID RESPONSE ASSESSMENT

THE ENVIRONMENTAL CRIME CRISIS THREATS TO SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT FROM ILLEGAL EXPLOITATION AND TRADE IN WILDLIFE AND FOREST RESOURCES

1

Nellemann, C., Henriksen, R., Raxter, P., Ash, N., Mrema, E. (Eds). 2014. The Environmental Crime Crisis – Threats to Sustainable Development from Illegal Exploitation and Trade in Wildlife and Forest Resources. A UNEP Rapid Response Assessment. United Nations Environment Programme and GRID-Arendal, Nairobi

and Arendal, www.grida.no ISBN: 978-82-7701-132-5 Printed by Birkeland Trykkeri AS, Norway

UNEP promotes environmentally sound practices globally and in its own activities. This

Disclaimer The contents of this report do not necessarily reflect the views or policies of UNEP or contributory organizations. The designations employed and the presentations do not imply the expression of any opinion whatsoever on the part of UNEP or contributory organiza- tions concerning the legal status of any country, territory, city, com- pany or area or its authority, or concerning the delimitation of its frontiers or boundaries.

publication is printed on fully recycled paper, FSC certified, post-consumer waste and chlorine- free. Inks are vegetable-based and coatings are water- based. UNEP’s distribution policy aims to reduce its carbon footprint.

2

A RAPID RESPONSE ASSESSMENT

THE ENVIRONMENTAL CRIME CRISIS THREATS TO SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT FROM ILLEGAL EXPLOITATION AND TRADE IN WILDLIFE AND FOREST RESOURCES

Christian Nellemann (Editor in Chief) Rune Henriksen Patricia Raxter Neville Ash Elizabeth Mrema

Editorial Team

Riccardo Pravettoni

Cartography

3

Preface Given the alarming pace, level of sophistication, and globalized nature that illegal trade in wildlife has now notoriously achieved, UNEP initiated a Rapid Response Assessment to provide some of the latest data, analysis, and broadest insights into the phenomenon. Tackling illegal wildlife trade demands this examination of the relationship between the environmental resources at stake, their legal and illegal exploitation, the loopholes that exacerbate the situation, the scale and types of crimes committed, and the dynamics of the demand driving the trade.

The consequences are increasingly evident: illegal wildlife trafficking constitutes a barrier to the achievement of both sustainable development and environmental sustainability. As reflected in a range of decisions of the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora, the UN Office for Drugs and Crime, the UN Commission on Crime Prevention and Criminal Justice, INTERPOL, the UN Security Council, and others, the illegal trade in wildlife and environmental crime are now widely recognized as significant threats on a global scale, to be tackled with urgency. However the responses to date, in terms of impact on the ground, have been too modest, and inadequate to the scale and growth of the threat to wildlife and the environment. A fuller understanding of the phenomenon of illegal wild- life trade is necessary to design and further strengthen – and accelerate – an effective strategy to successfully tackle the issue at all levels and with all means possible. A global and holistic response needs to be implemented to support national, regional and international efforts by strengthening and synchronizing actions targeting coherent environmental legislation, poverty alleviation and demand reduction.

In the international community, there is now growing recog- nition that the issue of the illegal wildlife trade has reached significant global proportions. Illegal wildlife trade and envi- ronmental crime involve a wide range of flora and fauna across all continents, estimated to be worth USD 70–213 billion annually. This compares to a global official devel- opment assistance envelope of about 135 billion USD per annum. The illegal trade in natural resources is depriving developing economies of billions of dollars in lost revenues and lost development opportunities, while benefiting a rela- tively small criminal fraternity. This report focuses on the far-reaching consequences of the environmental crime phenomenon we face today. The situa- tion has worsened to the extent that illegal trade in wildlife’s impacts are now acknowledged to go well beyond strictly environmental impacts – by seriously undermining econo- mies and livelihoods, good governance, and the rule of law. Even the security and safety of countries and communities is affected: the report highlights how wildlife and forest crime, including charcoal, provides potentially significant threat finance to militias and terrorist groups. Already recognized as a grave issue in DRC and Somalia by the UN Security Council, the assessment reveals that the scale and role of wild- life and forest crime in threat finance calls for much wider policy attention, well beyond those regions.

Achim Steiner UN Under-Secretary General and UNEP Executive Director

The illegal trade in natural resources is depriving developing economies of billions of dollars

4

Contents

Preface Executive summary Responses Recommendations Introduction Wildlife trafficking Forest crime Role of wood and illegal wildlife trade for threat finance

4 7 9

11 13 23 61 75 87 97 98 99

Responses Conclusion Recommendations Acronyms Contributors Notes

102 103

5

6

Executive summary Ecosystems play a crucial role and especially for developing economies by supporting revenues, future development opportunities, livelihoods and sustain- able harvest sectors relying heavily on natural resources, such as in agriculture, forestry and fisheries. Healthy ecosystems provide the platform upon which future food production and economies are ultimately based.

The opportunities ecosystems provide for future develop- ment, however, are threatened by serious and increasingly sophisticated transnational organized environmental crime, undermining development goals and good governance. Trans- national organized environmental crime may include illegal logging, poaching and trafficking of a wide range of animals, illegal fisheries, illegal mining and dumping of toxic waste. It is a rapidly rising threat to the environment, to revenues from natural resources, to state security, and to sustainable develop- ment. Combined estimates from the OECD, UNODC, UNEP and INTERPOL place the monetary value of all transnational organized environmental crime between 70–213 billion USD annually. This compares to a global ODA of ca. 135 billion USD. Whilst therefore benefiting a relatively small criminal fraternity, the illegal trade in natural resources is otherwise depriving developing economies of billions of dollars in lost revenues and development opportunities. The illegal trade in wildlife is no longer an emerging issue. The scale and nature of the challenge has been recognized in deci- sions of the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES), the UN Commis- sion on Crime Prevention and Criminal Justice, the Economic and Social Council (ECOSOC), the UN Security Council, UN General Assembly, INTERPOL, the World Customs Organi- sation (WCO) and others, including at national levels. High- level political conferences have also addressed the issue, most notably recently convened in Botswana and Paris (December 2013), London (February 2014), and Dar es Salaam (May 2014). However, the responses in terms of impact on the ground are still behind the scale and development of the threat to wildlife, including forests, as well as increasingly also development goals. The illegal trade in fauna and flora has been estimated by different sources to be worth 7–23 billion dollars annually. The trade involves a wide range of species including insects, reptiles, amphibians, fish and mammals. It concerns both live and dead specimens or products thereof, used for pharmaceu- tical, food, pets, ornamental or traditional medicinal purposes. Illegal harvest and trade includes a range of taxa such as gorillas, chimpanzees, elephants, tigers, rhinos, Tibetan ante-

lopes, bears, corals, birds, pangolins, reptiles, sturgeon for black caviar, and a wide range of other commercial fisheries species from the high seas and territorial waters. All of these have a significant value not only on the black market, but even more to national economies if managed sustainably. The illegal trade in wildlife operates per definition outside government official regulation and management, and thus represents a significant economic, environmental and security threat that has received relatively little attention in the past. The possible number of elephants killed in Africa is in the range of 20–25,000 elephants per year out of a population of 420,000–650,000. For the forest elephant, population size has been estimated to decline by ca. 62% between 2002 and 2011. Poached African ivory may represent an end-user street value in Asia of an estimated USD 165–188 million of

7

coal trade alone involves an annual revenue loss of at least USD 1.9 billion to African countries. With current trends in urbanization and the projected population increase of another 1.1 billion people in Sub-SaharanAfrica by 2050, the demand for charcoal is expected to at least triple in the coming three decades. This will generate severe impacts like large–scale deforesta- tion, pollution and subsequent health problems in slum areas, especially for women. The increased charcoal demand will also strongly accelerate emissions from both forest loss and emis- sions of short-lived climate pollutants – black carbon. Internet listings reveal over 1,900 charcoal dealers in Africa alone. At least 300 of these are exporting minimum orders of 10–20 tons of charcoal per shipment. Their minimum daily orders exceed the official total annual exports for some countries. For East, Central and West Africa, the net profits from dealing and taxing unregulated, illicit or illegal charcoal combined is estimated at USD 2.4–9 billion, compared to the USD 2.65 billion worth of street value heroin and cocaine in the region. Wildlife and forest crime has a serious role in threat finance to organized crime, and non-state armed groups including terrorist groups. Ivory also provides a portion of income raised by militia groups in the DRC and CAR, and is likely a primary source of income to the Lord’s Resistance Army (LRA) currently operating in the border triangle of South Sudan, CAR and DRC. Ivory similarly provides a source of income to Sudanese Janjaweed and other horse gangs operating between Sudan, Chad and Niger. However, given the estimated elephant popu- lations and the number of projected killed elephants within the striking range of these militia groups, the likely annual income from ivory to militias in the entire Sub-Saharan range is likely in the order of USD 4.0–12.2 million. Illicit taxing of charcoal, commonly up to 30% of the value, is conducted on a regular basis by organized criminals, militias and terrorist groups across Africa. Militias in DRC are esti- mated to make USD 14–50 million annually on road taxes. Al Shabaab’s primary income appears to be from informal taxation at roadblock checkpoints and ports. In one roadblock case they have been able to make up to USD 8–18 million per year from charcoal traffic in Somalia’s Badhadhe District. Trading in charcoal and taxing the ports have generated an estimated annual total of USD 38–56 million for Al Shabaab. The overall size of the illicit charcoal export from Somalia has been estimated at USD 360–384 million per year. For African countries with ongoing conflicts, including Mali, CAR, DRC, Sudan and Somalia, a conservative estimate is that the militia and terrorist groups in the regions may gain USD 111–289 million USD annually, dependent upon prices, from their involvement in, and taxing of, the illegal or unregulated char- coal trade. More investigation is needed to determine the role of charcoal for threat finance.

raw ivory, in addition to ivory from Asian sources. For rhinos, some 94% of the poaching takes place in Zimbabwe and South Africa, which have the largest remaining populations. Here poaching has increased dramatically from possibly less than 50 in 2007 to over 1,000 in 2013 involving organized syndicates. Rhinos have disappeared entirely from several Asian and African countries in recent years. Rhino horn poached last year is valued around USD 63.8 – 192 million USD, much less at the frontline. The scale of revenue from wildlife crime is dwarfed by the income from illegal logging and forest crime. Forest crime, such as illegal logging, has previously been estimated to represent a value of 30–100 billion USD annually or 10–30% of the total global timber trade. An estimated 50–90% of the wood in some individual tropical countries is suspected to come from illegal sources or has been logged illegally. Forest crime appears to take place in four forms: 1) The illegal exploitation of high-value endangered (CITES listed) wood species, including rosewood and mahogany; 2) Illegal logging of timber for sawn wood, building material and furniture; 3) Illegal logging and laundering of wood through plantation and agricultural front companies to supply pulp for the paper industry; and 4) Utilization of the vastly unregulated woodfuel and charcoal trade to conceal illegal logging in and outside protected areas, conduct extensive tax evasion and fraud, and supply fuel through the informal sector. For pulp and paper production, networks of shell companies and plantations are actively used to by-pass logging morato- riums under the pretext of agricultural or palm- oil invest- ments, used to funnel illegal timber through plantations, or to ship wood and pulp via legal plantations in order to re-clas- sify pulp or wood as legal production, undermining also legal business and production. These methods effectively bypass many current customs efforts related to the Lacey Act and the EU FLEGT programme to restrict the import of illegal tropical wood to the US and to the EU, respectively. Based on data from EUROSTAT, FAO and the International Tropcial Timber Organization (ITTO), the EU and the US annually imports approximately 33.5 million tons of tropical wood in all its forms. It is estimated that 62–86% of all suspected illegal tropical wood entering the EU and US arrives in the form of paper, pulp or wood chips, not as roundwood or sawnwood or furniture products, which have received the most attention in the past. In Africa 90% of wood consumed is used for woodfuel and charcoal (regional range 49–96%), with an official char- coal production of 30.6 million tons in 2012, worth approxi- mately USD 9.2–24.5 billion annually. The unregulated char-

8

Responses Illegal trade in forest and wildlife products, as well as the illegal exploitation of natural resources is now widely recog- nized as a significant threat to both the environment and to sustainable development. This is reflected in a range of decisions from CITES, from the UN Commission on Crime Prevention and Criminal Justice, INTERPOL and the UN Security Council, including on Somalia and DRC. International enforcement collaboration, such as the International Consortium on Combating Wildlife Crime (ICCWC), which includes CITES, UNODC, INTERPOL, the World Bank and WCO, together with increased collaboration amongst agencies, such as with UNEP, and with countries, has created a more effective structure to provide support to countries in the fields of policing, customs, prosecution and the judiciary. These initiatives have revealed important and significant early results. Poaching for Shahtoosh wool from Tibetan or Chiru antelopes caused a dramatic drop of likely 80–90% or nearly a million Chiru antelopes in China in the 1990–2000s and resulted in a significant environmental, police and military effort to

prevent eradication. It was combined with the establishment of some of the largest protected areas in world. While popula- tions are slowly recovering, they are still very vulnerable and more surveys urgently needed. Brazil is probably one of the world’s leading countries in a wide enforcement effort to reduce illegal deforestation by tackling the full criminal chain and their networks. Deforestation in Brazil’s Amazon reached its lowest level in 2012, since monitoring of the forest began in 1988. It went down by 64–78%, depending upon estimates, primarily as a result of a coordinated enforce- ment approach using satellite imagery and targeted police oper- ations and investigations. This was supported by large-scale efforts through REDD and other initiatives to strengthen the participatory processes of indigenous peoples, stake holders and alternative livelihoods. Many parts of the world could learn from the measures and actions undertaken by Brazil. In Tanzania over 1,100 rangers have received specialized training in the past two years. The training covers tracking of poachers, tactics and wildlife crime scene management, and it has been done under the auspices of INTERPOL and

9

On customs, the UNODC-WCO Container Control Programme (CCP) has been successful in targeting sea and dry port container shipments in an increasing number of countries. Seizures include not only counterfeits and drugs, but also wildlife and timber products, such as ivory, rhino horn and rosewood. An Indonesian case has shown how money-laundering meas- ures can lead to prosecutions for illegal logging. A UNODC training course in 2012 involved Indonesian financial inves- tigative and anti-corruption agencies (PPATK, KPK) ranging from the federal to the local levels. Methods learnt in the course were applied to detect, investigate and prosecute illegal logging. After the course the Financial Investigative Units detected highly suspicious transactions leading to the conviction of a timber-smuggling suspect who was sentenced to eight years of imprisonment with evidence showing how USD 127 million passed through his accounts. However, the scale and coordination of the efforts must be substantially increased and a widened effort implemented. They must be combined with efforts on good governance, management and consumer awareness to ensure a long-term demand reduction. It is particularly crucial to support the countries directly, as financial resources need to be directed towards efforts with effect on the ground, whether in enforce- ment, governance or consumer awareness. The pace, level of sophistication and globalized nature of wild- life and forest crime is beyond the capacity of many countries and individual organizations to address. Of particular rele- vance is the increasing involvement of transnational organ- ized crime in the illegal trade of wildlife and timber, as well as the significant impact on the environment and development. Solutions will require a combination of efforts to address both supply and demand reduction, based on deterrence, transpar- ency, legal enforcement, behavioral change and alternative live- lihoods. Differentiated strategies for addressing illegal wildlife and timber trafficking must be developed across the relevant value chains (source, transit and destination countries) A coherent effort to fully address the multiple dimensions of environmental crime and its implications for development is needed. This will require both national and international stakeholders to be involved in the process, including envi- ronmental, enforcement and development sectors, as well as stakeholders involved in security and peacekeeping missions. Environmental crime provides a serious threat to wildlife and plant species, ecosystems, their services, climate change and to good governance and sustainable development goals and requires a multi-faceted response

UNODC, and has resulted in a series of frontline arrests linking suspects to the scene of crime. The training has not only improved rangers’ ability to stop and arrest poachers, but it has also supported successful prosecutions and good enforcement ethics based on evidence, prosecution and trial in court. The work they are doing is critical and also dangerous. Over 1,000 rangers are claimed killed worldwide in service to protect wildlife in the last decades. Improved intelligence sharing among agencies has also enabled INTERPOL to support countries in larger and more effective police operations, leading to larger seizures of illegal timber and wildlife products. In 2013 Operation Lead, under INTERPOL’s project LEAF, was conducted in Costa Rica and Venezuela. It resulted in 292,000 cubic meters of wood and wood products seized – equivalent to 19,500 truckloads (worth ca. USD 40 million). Operation Wildcat in East Africa involved wildlife enforcement officers, forest authorities, park rangers, police and customs officers from five countries ‒ Mozambique, South Africa, Swaziland, Tanzania and Zimbabwe, resulting in 240 kg of elephant ivory seized and 660 arrests.

10

Recommendations

Strengthen awareness through certification schemes , such as e.g. the Forest Stewardship Council (FSC), to facilitate consumer recognition of legal and illegal products. This especially applies to such wood products as paper that currently include the largest share of import-ex- ports of tropical wood, as well as to CITES-listed species and their products. To this end, both voluntary, market and legisla- tive approaches could enhance collaboration between govern- ments, civil society and the private sector. Strengthen institutional, legal and regulatory systems to further combat corruption to effectively address wildlife-related offences and to ensure that legal trade is monitored and managed effectively. 7 8 Strengthen international and development support to the entire enforcement chain , including frontline, investigator, customs, prosecutors and the judiciary, with particular reference to environmental crime to support legal revenues and sustainable development, and to reduce the impacts on the environment from environmental crime. 9 Strengthen support to INTERPOL, UNODC, WCO and CITES, such as through ICCWC as well as individual programmes , to enable them to support member states and other relevant stakeholders to further identify, develop and implement the most appropriate responses to environmental crime, reflecting and acknowledging the serious threats and effects it has on environmental govern- ance, wildlife, ecosystems and the services it provides. 10 Invest in capacity building and technological support to national environment, wildlife and law enforcement agencies to enable them to further protect key populations of iconic endangered species threatened by poaching, such as but not limited to, rhinos, tigers and the African elephant as a necessary response to safeguard these species from poaching, alongside renewed efforts to strength- ening habitat protection and management. and countries to reduce the role of illicit trade and taxing of forest and wildlife products for threat finance to non-state armed groups and terrorism. Strengthen specif- ically the research on the possible role of trade in wildlife and timber products including charcoal for threat finance and identify gaps in environmental legislation that may facilitate this. 11 12 Strengthen environmental legislation, compliance and awareness and call upon enforcement agencies

Acknowledge the multiple dimensions of environ­ mental crime and its serious impact on the environment and sustainable development goals, and help support and balance the appropriate coordination and sharing of infor- mation from stakeholders, such as civil society, private sector, indigenous peoples, governments and a wider UN system with the need and recognition of also the role of law enforce- ment in good environmental governance. 1 Call for a comprehensive coordinated UN system and national approach to environmental crime by helping coordinate efforts on environmental legislation and regulations, poverty alleviation and development support with responses from the enforcement sector to curb environmental crime, as part of a holistic approach to challenge the serious threat to both the environment and sustainable development caused by the continued environmental crime. environmental impacts of environmental crime and to engage the relevant coordination mechanisms of the UN system to support countries and national, regional and inter- national law enforcement agencies with relevant environ- mental information to facilitate their efforts to combat the illegal trade in wildlife species and their products, as well as illegal logging and illegal trade in timber. 2 3 Further call upon UNEP as the global environ­ mental authority to address the serious and rising Calls upon the entire international and bilateral donor community to recognize and address environ- mental crime as a serious threat to sustainable develop­ ment and revenues, and to support national, regional and global efforts for the effective implementation of, compliance with and enforcement of targeted measures to curb illegal trade in wildlife species and their products as well as illegal logging in timber. 4 Support immediate, decisive and collective action to narrow the gap between commitments and compliance , such as the ones expressed in multilateral envi- ronmental agreements, through national implementation and enforcement, including the relevant decisions and reso- lutions taken by their governing bodies intended to combat the illicit trade in wildlife and forest products. 5 Identify end-user markets and systematically design, support and implement where appropriate consumer awareness campaigns focusing on high consumer end-markets. Call upon both Governments and the UN system to effectively work with and engage civil society and the private sector in efforts to identify alternatives to consumer demands for traded wildlife species and forest products. 6

11

12

Introduction Ecosystems play a crucial role and especially for developing economies by supporting revenues, future development opportunities, livelihoods and sustainable harvest in agri- culture, forestry and fisheries. Ecosystems support tourism, valued at 5–10% of national economies. 1 Ecosystems also supply vital services, such as buffering effects of extreme weather such as floods, drought and cyclones, and through provision of safe water supply to cities. They are valued globally at up to USD 72 trillion. 2 Healthy ecosystems provide the platform upon which future food production and economies are ultimately based. 3 Opportunities, management and future development are also threatened by serious and increasingly sophisticated transnational organized environmental crime, which is undermining development goals and good governance. Transnational organized environmental crime may include illegal logging, poaching and trafficking of wildlife, illegal fisheries, mining and dumping of toxic waste. It is a rapidly rising threat to the environment, to revenues from natural resources, to state security, and to sustainable development. Individual estimates from the OECD, UNEP, INTERPOL and UNODC place the monetary value of different forms of transnational organized environmental crimes to between USD 70–213 billion annually. 4 This compares to a 2013 global ODA of ca. USD 135 billion. 5

Wildlife crime is no longer an emerging issue. The scale and nature of the challenge has been accepted in decisions of the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES)(see decisions and resolutions following COP 16) 6 , the UN Commission on Crime Prevention and Criminal Justice and UNODC, 7 the Economic and Social Council (ECOSOC), the UN Security Council, UN General Assembly, INTERPOL, 8 the World Customs Organisation (WCO) and others, including many significant nations. High- level political conferences have also addressed the issue, most notably recently convened in Botswana and Paris (December 2013), London (February 2014), and Dar-es-Salaam (May 2014). However, the responses in terms of impact on the ground are still behind the scale and development of the threat to wildlife, including forests, as well as increasingly also development goals.

The illegal trade in wildlife is particularly challenging as it involves multiple dimensions, including poverty, governance and is often hidden in legal trade. It also commonly involves the mixing of legal and illegal harvesting of resources. Such harvesting is done using advanced, deliberate and carefully executed systems of laundering of illegally procured wood, charcoal, bushmeat and fish or other wildlife products. Illegal trade in wildlife can involve complex combinations of methods, including trafficking, forgery, bribes, use of

Transnational organized environmental crime involves primarily five key areas:

1. Illegal logging and deforestation 2. Illegal fisheries 3. Illegal mining and trade in minerals including conflict diamonds 4. Illegal dumping and trade in hazardous and toxic waste 5. Illegal trade and poaching of wildlife and plants

13

threat finance fuelling conflicts and terrorism is often also an integral element of the supply chain.

shell companies, violence, and even hacking of government websites to obtain or forge permits. The hacking of websites shows some actors’ level of sophistication. The more typical and easier way, however, is simply to bribe corrupt officials so that they issue the necessary and required permits and certificates and other relevant documents. In this way laun- dering of illegally sourced wood, fish and other wildlife prod- ucts in the supply chain is commonly practiced. Corruption is a deeply embedded feature of environmental crime, facil- itating crime across all levels of the supply chains. Compre- hensive anti-corruption measures must be a key feature of the overall effort. Due to the complexity of the issue of illegal wildlife trade, a diverse response is required in the short and long-term, and from local to international levels. To curb the rise in illegal wildlife trade responses must involve a range of legal meas- ures, enforcement, legislation, regulation, environmental management, consumer- and demand-reduction strategies, and promotion of alternative livelihood opportunities. Fully understanding the phenomenon of illegal wildlife trade requires a broad insight into the relationship between the envi- ronmental resources at stake, their legal and illegal exploita- tion, loopholes, the scale and type of crimes committed, and the dynamics of the demand driving the trade. The resulting

Illegal trade in wildlife is depriving developing economies of billions of dollars in lost revenues and development oppor- tunities. Due to the problem’s broad scale, a comprehensive approach is required. To curb the rise in environmental crime the response must involve legal responses, enforcement, legis- lation, regulation, environmental management, consumer- and demand-reduction strategies, and alternative livelihood opportunities. Understanding the phenomenon requires a broad insight into the relationship between the environ- mental resources at stake, their legal and illegal exploitation, loopholes, as well as the scale and type of crimes committed. The threat finance fuelling conflicts and terrorism is often an integrated part of this picture, and must be taken into account. Environmental crimes are difficult to define as they involve a range of types of crime of varying gravity. Ahelpful starting point is the UN Convention Against Transnational Organized Crime (UNTOC), which defines a transnational organized crime as “any serious transnational offence undertaken by three or more people with the aim of material gain”. The problem with relying only on this definition is that ‘serious crime’ is defined as an offence punishable by a maximum prison sentence of

14

Major environmental crimes

At stake:

3 0 t o 1 0 0 b i l l i o n U S $

At stake:

1 1 t o 3 0 b i l l i o n U S $

Livelihoods

Species extintion

Fish stocks depletion

Endangered forests

National economies: Illegal logging between 15 and 30 % of the global legal trade

Loss of revenues for local fishers and States

Targeted species: tuna, toothfish, sharks

Climate change emissions from deforestation and forest degradation

FISH

TIMBER

D R I V E R S

Tropical species demand for pets, food and traditional medicine

WILDLIFE

At stake:

7 t o 2 3 b i l l i o n U S $

1 1 b i l l i o n U S $

Corruption National

Lack of legislation

Species extinction

National

Local

Mafias

National International Lack of law enforcement

Corporate crime International

International National

National

Increasing demand Domestic International

Conflict

Major routes from North to South (unlike other environmental crimes)

Regional National

At stake:

1 0 t o 1 2 b i l l i o n U S $

At stake:

1 2 t o 4 8 b i l l i o n U S $

Ecosystem depletion Human health

Resource depletion

Gold, diamond, rare earth... Livelihoods (local communities)

1 3 5 b i l l i o n U S $

WASTE

Loss of raw material for local industry

MINERALS

A comparison: Official Development Assistance (ODA)

GRID-Arendal and Zoï Environment Network, 2012.

Figure 1. Estimated scale of various forms of transnational environmental crime. 15

15

Western Central Pacific

Environmental crime network

Papua New Guinea

Arafura Sea

Indonesia

Mainland Southeast Asia

Japan

Bering Sea

China

Myanmar

Russia

Golden Crescent

North America

Western Europe

Mediterranean Sea

Eastern Africa

Andes area

Central Africa

Amazonia

West Africa

Southern Africa

Central South Atlantic

SouthWest Atlantic

16

New and old trafficking routes

Environment-related illegal trafficking. Includes wood, wildlife, animal parts (i.e.ivory, rhinocerous horns and fur) and wastes

Main illegal, unreported and unregulated fishing areas

“Traditional” illegal trafficking. Includes heroin, cocaine and human beings Main destination country Main transit country Country of origin of “traditional” illegal trafficking Main country or region of origin of environmental related illegal trafficking Sources: UNODC Annual Reports 2010 e 2013; WWF-Australia; Globaltimber.co.uk, Estimates of the percentage of “Illegal Timber” in the imports of wood-based products from selected countries, 2007; TRAFFIC; FAO; World Ocean Review Report 2013; Michigan State University, Human Trafficking Task Force; Greenpeace, The Toxic Ship, 2010; National Geographic press review.

at least four years or more. A definitive definition of environ- mental crime, which is enforceable throughout the transna- tional crime chain, is therefore urgently needed to ensure a common understanding of the terminology. Legislation on environmental crimes in many countries is under-developed. Sentencing guidelines typically address petty crimes and do not reflect the very serious nature and involve- ment of organized crime and the impacts it has on environment, economic and social development of the countries and local communities or populations. They do not take into account the sheer scale of loss of resources, money laundering or threats to state security involved. Existing laws inmost countries are already in place to address such serious crimes, but there is a consider- able lack of awareness of how environmental crime often falls into other categories of far more serious violations. Often the wrong laws, such as those pertaining to pure environmental violations are applied in court, rather than those addressing the involvement of organized crime, tax fraud, violence, trafficking and even funding of non-state armed groups. The lack of information regarding the role of environmental crime in threat finance – the financing of criminal networks and non-state armed groups including militias, extremists and terrorism – thus lead to comparatively trivial sentences of only minimal fines and occasionally short-term prison sentences. Insufficient investigation of the role of networks in environ- mental crime, which in many cases in practice constitutes threat finance, too often leads to failure in prosecution. This gap is being heavily exploited by organized crime to exploit natural resources, expand their illicit business sectors and contribute to conflicts with little or no risk. The low risk of illegal trading in

Annual revenue, higher estimates Billion dollars A growing sector

Illegal logging and trafficking

Drugs

200

100

50

E-crimes

Illegal fishing

30

Wildlife trafficking

23

20

Illegal trafficking of light weapons

Illegal trafficking of toxic wastes

12

Sources: TRAFFIC; FAO; UNODC; Global Financial Integrity

Figure 2. Number of transactions registered in wildlife and plants by CITES.

17

wildlife or forest products also provides a safe haven or venue to conceal ex pat finance to extremist groups.

the countries. The IUU fishing off Senegal constitute a loss of about USD 300 million in 2012, which is 2 per cent of GDP. 13

In the past decade, CITES, INTERPOL, UNODC (UNOffice for Drugs and Crime), and UNEP (UN Environment Programme) have warned against the rise of organized transnational envir­ onmental crime. More sophisticated ways to conduct illegal extraction of resources along with more advanced laundering methods of both illegally extracted resources and the proceeds from the illegal trade have been observed, 9 Furthermore, organ- ized crime involved in drugs, trafficking, violence, murder and corruption undermine human- and state security. Criminal actors from other criminal sectors are attracted to environ- mental crime because of a combination of high profits and low probability of getting caught and convicted. This applies espe- cially with respect to transnational activities, where enforce- ment has been virtually non-existent until now. 10 Great concern has been expressed concerning illegal fishery off the coast of West Africa and its impact on local fishermen. The illegal, unreported and unregulated (IUU) fishing off West Africa, comprising between one third and half the catch, is worth USD 1.3 billion per year. 11 Illegal fish- eries have been previously discussed for Somalia, with links to piracy. 12 Such fisheries involve major loss of revenues to

Of even greater concern is the impact of illegal logging on carbon emissions and loss of revenues. Tropical deforestation accounts for 10–15% of global emissions, and nearly 50–90% of the logging is illegal in major tropical countries 14 – with direct threats to emission reductions schemes and programmes such as REDD, REDD+ and UN REDD. The substantial rise and extent of transnational organized environmental crime also endangers human- and state secu- rity by facilitating and spreading collusive corruption. Loss of revenues for the economic development of many countries impacting upon food security, damage to the environment and the ecosystems vital for the services they provide for the local population, is highly damaging to developing countries, as the largest share of the proceeds leave the countries or go to tax havens or foreign nationals. Scale of environmental crime The economic impact of loss of resources and revenues from envir­ onmental crime is substantial – especially on illegal logging and fisheries – and probably just as large as or well exceed global ODA (Official Development Assistance) of around USD 135 billion.

18

Table 1: Different forms of environmental crime and their approximate estimated scale. Great uncertainties exist regarding the accuracy of the estimates . 16

Environmental crime

Annual loss of resources (US$)

Source or reviews

Illegal logging and trade

30–100 billion

UNEP/INTERPOL 2012 (10–30% of the global trade); OECD 2012

Illegal fisheries

11–30 billion

OECD 2012; MRAG og UBC 2008 (12–32% of the global trade)

Illegal extraction and trade in minerals/ mining

12–48 billion

GFI 2011; GA 2012 (Estimated as only 1–4% by industry of the global trade)

Illegal trade and dumping of hazardous waste

10–12 billion

US 2000; GA 2012

Illegal trade and poaching of plants and wildlife

7–23 billion

Wyler and Sheik 2008; GFI 2011; OECD 2012

Sum environmental crime and loss from primarily developing countries

Minus 70–minus 213 billion

Official development assistance (ODA) (2013 estimate)

Ca. 135 billion

19

20

21

22

Wildlife trafficking The illegal trade in wildlife has been estimated by different sources to be worth 7–23 billion dollars annually, 17 involving a wide range of species including insects, reptiles, amphibians, fish and mammals. It concerns both live and dead specimens or products thereof. The specimens and products are used for pharmaceutical, ornamental or traditional medicinal purposes. The transnational pet trade in trop- ical fish, primates and reptiles is also a major beneficiary of illegal harvest and trades. Illegal harvest and trade further includes a range of species from iconic ones like gorillas, chimpanzees and orangutans, elephants, tigers, rhinos, Chiru ante- lopes and bears to corals, birds, pangolins, reptiles and sturgeon for black caviar. All of these have a significant value not only on the black market, but even more to national economies if managed sustainably. Environmental crime operates per definition outside government regulation and management, and thus represents a significant economic, environmental and not least security threat that has received little attention in the past.

Annually, the international wildlife trade is estimated by CITES to include hundreds of millions of plant and animal specimens. The trade is diverse, ranging from live animals and plants to a vast array of wildlife products derived from them, including food products, exotic leather goods, wooden musical instruments, timber, tourist curios and medicines. Levels of exploitation of some animal and plant species are high and the trade in them, together with other factors, such as habitat loss, is capable of heavily depleting their populations and even bringing some species close to extinction. Many wild- life species in trade are not endangered, but the existence of an agreement to ensure the sustainability of the trade is impor- tant in order to safeguard these resources for the future. Because the trade in wild animals and plants crosses borders between countries, the effort to regulate it requires interna- tional cooperation to safeguard certain species from over-ex- ploitation. CITES, in collaboration with the states, helps provide varying degrees of protection to more than 35,000 species of animals and plants, whether they are traded as live specimens, fur coats or dried herbs. CITES also regulates trade in more marine species following COP 16 decisions. Bushmeat hunting – the hunting of wild animals for food – is also a major threat to wildlife populations across the globe – including in protected areas.

A high number of iconic species like rhinos, tigers, great apes and elephants, to mention a few, are also victims of the illicit trade. But many other species are also being hunted inten- sively, such as guanacos in Argentina–Chile, and Saiga ante- lopes in Kazakhstan, where populations crashed following the collapse of the Soviet Union by over 95%. 18

23

The bushmeat chain reaction

Demographic increase

Logging and Mining

Fossil fuel extraction

Hydroelectric production

Infrastructure building

Workers concentration in wildlife habitat

War

Weak governance

Soldiers and refugees subsistence

Hunting methods

Low or no regulation

Forest wildlife access facilitated

Firegun usage

Increasing harvest competi- tion

Cultural and social changes

All year hunting

Hunting efficency increased

Demand Increase

Lack of meat farming

Low meat productivity and higher costs of production

Deforestation and habitat loss

Plans imposed by International Finance

Absence of economic and alimentary alternatives

Unemployment

Commercial bushmeat hunting and species threat

Poverty

Source: Redmond, I., et al., Recipes for Survival: Controlling the Bushmeat Trade , WSPA Report 2006.

Figure 3: The illicit bushmeat trade involves a series of underlying socio-economic factors, but leads, with rising population densities, to local depletions of wildlife species, and increasingly inside protected areas .

24

Saiga antelope populations

RUSSIA

North-West Pre-Caspian

Ural

Betpak-dala

MONGOLIA

Ustiurt

RUSSIA

KAZAKHSTAN

Aral Sea

Mongolia

Lake Balqash

Caspian Sea

CHINA

Caspian Sea

Saiga antelope population

AZERBAIJAN

Overall direction of migrations (North in summer, South in winter)

UZBEKISTAN

Terrestrial protected areas

KYRGYZSTAN

TURKMENISTAN

Source: ACBK, 2011; WWF Mongolia, Web-based GIS database on biological diversity of Mongolia; UNEP-WCMC, Protected Planet web database; Russian Committee for the UNESCO MAB Programme.

IRAN

Figure 4: Saigas have been hunted since prehistoric times and today poaching remains the primary threat to this critically endan- gered species. Following the collapse of the Soviet Union, Saiga populations crashed by more than 95% within a decade. While a number of Saiga populations are starting to stabilize, three continue to be in a precarious state (North-West Pre-Caspian, Ural and Ustiurt populations).

25

26

The effect of roads, expanding agriculture and livestock, along with increased poaching can also be observed in South America, such as on the wild camelids in the steppe, deserts and Andean foothills of Argentina and Chile. Guanacos ( Lama guanicoe ) and vicunãs ( Vicugna vicugna ) have lost 40–75 per cent of their ranges, and probably dropped at least 90 per cent in their numbers over the last centuries (Cajal, 1991; Franklin et al. , 1997). Only a fraction, probably less than 3 per cent of the guanaco and some 34 per cent of that of vicunãs are in protected areas (Donadio and Buskirk, 2006). Also these species often avoid areas with expanding livestock and have been heavily exposed to poaching. Source: Cajal, J. L. 1991. An integrated approach to the management of wild camelidsin Argentina. In Mares, M. A. &Schmidly, D. J. (eds.), Latin American Mammology.History, Biodiversity and Conservation.University of Oklahoma Press, Norman; Donadio, E. &Buskirk, S. W. 2006. Flight behavior of guanacos and vicunas in areas of western Argentina with and without poaching.Biological Conservation 127: 139-145Franklin, W. L., Bas, F., Bonacic, C. F., Cunazza, C. & Soto N. 1997. Striving to manage Patagonia guanacos for sustained use in the grazing agroecosystems of southern Chile. Wildlife Soc. Bull.25: 65–73

27

28

Illicit trade in Great apes The primary threat to the Great apes is habitat loss. However, great apes are also trafficked in various ways. In many cases wild capture is opportunistic: farmers capture infant apes after having killed the mother during a crop-raid, or bush- meat hunters shoot or trap adults for food, and then collect the babies to sell. Organized illicit dealers increasingly target great apes as part of a far more sophisticated and systematic trade. They use transnational criminal networks to supply a range of markets, including the tourist entertainment industry, disreputable zoos, and wealthy individuals who want exotic pets as status symbols. Great apes are used to attract tourists to entertainment facilities such as amuse- ment parks and circuses. They are even used in tourist photo sessions on Mediterranean beaches and boxing matches in Asian safari parks. Even conservative estimates suggest that the illegal trade in great apes is widespread. From 2005 to 2011, a minimum of 643 chimpanzees, 48 bonobos, 98 gorillas and 1,019 orangu- tans are documented to have been lost from the wild through illicit activities. These numbers are based on seizures and arrival rates of orphans at sanctuaries in 12 African countries and rehabilitation centres in Indonesia, expert reports, and great ape bushmeat and body parts seized from illegal traders. Based on extrapolations, it is likely that as many as 22,218 wild great apes were lost between 2005 and 2011 related to the illegal trade, with chimpanzees comprising 64 per cent of that number. The annual average loss of 2,972 great apes could have serious consequences for the biodiversity of key regions, given the important role great apes play in main- taining healthy ecosystems. Sadly, law enforcement efforts lag far behind the rates of illegal trade. Only 27 arrests were made in Africa and Asia in connection with great ape trade between 2005 and 2011, and one quarter of the arrests were never prosecuted. Prices for great apes vary greatly. A poacher may sell a live chimpanzee for USD 50–100, whereas the middleman will resell that same chimpanzee at a mark-up of as much as 400 per cent. Orangutans can fetch USD 1,000 at resale, and gorillas illegally sold to a zoo in Malaysia in 2002 reportedly went for USD 400,000 each. Such prices are extremely rare however, and the poacher who captures a live specimen may lose it to injuries, illness or stress, or have it confiscated if the poacher is arrested. At best, the actual poachers may earn only a fraction of the ultimate sale price of a great ape. 19

29

Made with