Google, Meta, PayPal, and Chainalysis team up to fight illegal wildlife trade with AI and blockchain

2 hours ago 2



Think of the illegal wildlife trade as the internet’s ugliest open secret. Exotic animals listed on social media. Ivory sold through e-commerce platforms. Payments laundered through crypto wallets. Now, a coalition of some of the biggest names in tech and blockchain has decided to do something about it.

On June 22, Google, Meta, TikTok, Alibaba, PayPal, Chainalysis, and TRM Labs, among others, announced a joint commitment to combat illegal wildlife trafficking using AI detection tools and blockchain analytics. The initiative was convened by Prince William and The Royal Foundation’s United for Wildlife during London Climate Action Week.

The scale of the problem

The United Nations Environment Programme estimates that illegal wildlife trade generates up to $23 billion annually. Approximately one million plant and animal species face the threat of extinction partly because of this trade.

The participating tech platforms collectively represent about 20% of global e-commerce and reach 90% of the world’s social media users.

How AI and blockchain fit in

The strategy splits neatly into two lanes. On one side, the tech platforms are committing to enhanced AI capabilities designed to detect and remove illicit wildlife listings before they reach buyers. On the other side, PayPal, Chainalysis, and TRM Labs will focus on disrupting the financial flows that make wildlife trafficking profitable.

Blockchain analytics is particularly well-suited for this work. Wildlife traffickers have increasingly turned to cryptocurrency to move funds across borders without triggering traditional banking alerts. Companies like Chainalysis and TRM Labs specialize in tracing on-chain transactions, identifying wallets linked to illicit activity, and flagging suspicious patterns for law enforcement.

Telecom operators including Vodafone and Safaricom, along with airlines like British Airways, have signed on to support AI monitoring and public awareness campaigns.

Why this matters for the crypto and tech sectors

For blockchain analytics firms, the initiative could meaningfully expand their addressable market. Chainalysis and TRM Labs have built their businesses primarily around financial crime compliance, sanctions screening, and law enforcement support. Adding environmental crime to that portfolio creates a new category of demand.

Prior collaborations between tech firms and NGOs on wildlife protection have existed in various forms, meaning this isn’t the first time the industry has made promises in this space.

Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy.

Read Entire Article