RUSI Supports G20 to Advance Multilateral Action on Environmental Crimes

12 Dec 2025 12:49 PM

Commissioned by South Africa's G20 Presidency, RUSI delivered high-level analysis on the need to position environmental crime at the heart of the global agenda, leading to the G20 Cape Town Ministerial Declaration on Crimes that Affect the Environment – hailed as a historic first.

The G20 Environment and Climate Sustainability Working Group

Crimes that affect the environment are among the world’s most damaging and lucrative illicit activities. Yet the threat they pose has long been under-prioritised amid a fragmented multilateral response. In 2025, RUSI worked with South Africa's G20 presidency in a concerted effort to raise the profile of crimes that affect the environment as a cross-cutting global threat demanding an integrated response.

To support this initiative, Cathy Haenlein, RUSI’s Director of Organised Crime and Policing Studies, was commissioned by the South Africa G20 Presidency to deliver the Technical Paper 'Galvanising Multilateral Action on Crimes that Affect the Environment' and present the findings and recommendations to G20 member states.

Co-authored with Frances Craigie, Chief Director, Enforcement, South African National Department of Forestry, Fisheries and the Environment, the paper argued that:

Drawing on leading research, expert dialogue and practical lessons from past interventions, the paper put forward nine recommendations to advance the multilateral response to a threat causing irreversible damage across the globe.

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