A sweeping global enforcement effort has pulled nearly 20,000 threatened animals out of illegal trafficking networks — rescuing big cats, pangolins, primates, and tens of thousands of birds and turtles from criminal supply chains that span the globe. Operation Thunder 2024, led by Interpol and the World Customs Organization (WCO), ran for nearly four weeks across 138 countries and regions, resulting in 365 arrests and more than 2,200 seizures.
At a glance
- Wildlife trafficking seizure: Authorities recovered 12,427 birds, 5,877 turtles, 1,731 reptiles, 33 primates, 18 big cats, and 12 pangolins — nearly 20,000 live protected animals in total.
- Criminal networks dismantled: Six transnational organizations suspected of trafficking species protected under CITES were identified, along with more than 100 companies implicated in the illegal trade.
- Global operation scale: The campaign ran from Nov. 11 to Dec. 6, 2024 C.E., coordinating police, customs, border patrol, and wildlife officials across six continents.
What the rescues looked like on the ground
The sheer variety of what was recovered tells the story of how vast and varied wildlife crime has become.
In Turkey, officials stopped a vehicle at the Syrian border and found 6,500 songbirds crammed inside. At India’s Chennai International Airport, customs agents discovered 5,193 red-eared ornamental slider turtles hidden inside passenger suitcases arriving from Malaysia. U.S. authorities intercepted a metric ton of sea cucumbers — considered a delicacy in several markets — smuggled from Nicaragua. Both Australia and the U.K. reported seizures of bear bile, a traditional medicine ingredient extracted through a surgical tube inserted directly into a living bear’s gallbladder.
Timber was among the largest hauls by volume: 214.9 metric tons, primarily intercepted in sea cargo. Most other confiscations took place at airports and mail processing hubs, where traffickers rely on the sheer volume of packages to smuggle contraband past inspectors.
Why this kind of coordination matters
Wildlife crime is estimated to generate up to $21 billion annually worldwide, making it the fourth-largest international criminal trade after weapons, drugs, and human trafficking, according to Interpol. That scale requires an equally large response.
Interpol Secretary-General Valdecy Urquiza put it directly: “Organized crime networks are profiting from the demand for rare plants and animals, exploiting nature to fuel human greed. This has far-reaching consequences: it drives biodiversity loss, destroys communities, contributes to climate change and even fuels conflict and instability.”
WCO Secretary-General Ian Saunders noted that wildlife crime is “rapidly growing” and “highly lucrative” — and still often deprioritized by enforcement agencies. The cooperation mechanisms built through Operation Thunder, he said, are helping to change that by improving intelligence sharing across borders.
One particularly important tool in those efforts: DNA forensics. Where possible, wildlife forensic experts collected DNA samples from recovered animals before transferring them to conservation centers. Those samples help build prosecutorial cases — but they also map trafficking routes, helping investigators predict and intercept future shipments. The Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species (CITES) provides the legal framework that makes these cross-border prosecutions possible.
Online trafficking is growing fast
One of the more striking findings from Operation Thunder 2024 C.E. was how much of the illegal trade has moved online.
Investigators found suspects using multiple social media profiles and accounts linked across platforms and online marketplaces to expand their reach and obscure their operations. This mirrors a broader trend tracked by organizations like TRAFFIC, which monitors the wildlife trade globally and has documented a significant shift toward e-commerce channels in recent years.
The United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime has similarly noted that online platforms lower the barrier to entry for wildlife traffickers — making enforcement harder but also creating new digital evidence trails that investigators can follow.
Real progress, with real limits
Operations like Thunder represent genuine enforcement wins. Hundreds of animals that would otherwise have spent their lives in cages, or been killed for parts, are instead being cared for in conservation centers. Six criminal networks have been disrupted. Hundreds of companies are now under scrutiny.
But nearly 20,000 seized animals also represents a fraction of what moves through illegal channels each year. The World Wildlife Fund estimates that wildlife trafficking affects hundreds of species across every continent. Enforcement sweeps, however well-coordinated, can only do so much without parallel efforts to reduce demand — particularly in markets where trafficked animals are consumed as food, medicine, or status symbols.
That work is slower, harder, and less visible than a four-week global operation. But the partnerships built through efforts like Operation Thunder are a foundation for it.
Read more
For more on this story, see: Mongabay
For more from Good News for Humankind, see:
- Ghana creates a new marine protected area at Cape Three Points
- Renewables now make up at least 49% of global power capacity
- The Good News for Humankind archive on wildlife conservation
About this article
- 🤖 This article is AI-generated, based on a framework created by Peter Schulte.
- 🌍 It aims to be inspirational but clear-eyed, accurate, and evidence-based, and grounded in care for the Earth, peace and belonging for all, and human evolution.
- 💬 Leave your notes and suggestions in the comments below — I will do my best to review and implement where appropriate.
- ✉️ One verified piece of good news, one insight from Antihero Project, every weekday morning. Subscribe free.
More Good News
-

Germany finishes 60-year project turning coal mines into a 23-lake district
Germany’s Lusatian Lakeland is now complete — a chain of 23 human-made lakes covering 14,000 hectares where open-cast coal mines once scarred the land between Berlin and Dresden. The final piece, Lake Sedlitz, opened to swimmers and boaters this April, and in June, five of the lakes will be linked by navigable canals into a continuous 5,000-hectare waterway. Engineers spent decades channeling river water into the old craters, securing embankments, and flushing out acid — work that would have taken nature a century. The region now welcomes around 800,000 overnight stays a year, with former miners finding work in hospitality…
-

Brazilian researchers find vitamin D boosts breast cancer chemo by 79%
Vitamin D may give breast cancer chemotherapy a meaningful boost, according to a new Brazilian trial in which 43% of women taking a daily supplement saw their tumors disappear completely, compared to 24% on a placebo. Researchers at São Paulo State University gave 80 patients a modest 2,000 IU dose alongside their standard pre-surgery chemo — a level safe enough for everyday use and cheap enough for almost anyone. Most women in the study were vitamin D-deficient to begin with, a pattern common in cancer patients worldwide. If larger trials confirm the finding, it points to something rare and hopeful…
-

Chinese solar exports double in last month to hit record high
China’s solar exports hit a record 68.03 gigawatts in March 2026, nearly doubling February’s volume as countries raced to replace disrupted Middle Eastern oil and gas. Fifty nations logged all-time-high imports of Chinese solar equipment that month, with African countries jumping 176% from February alone. Behind those numbers are governments that had been moving cautiously on renewables and suddenly found solar to be the fastest, cheapest answer on the table. Battery and electric vehicle shipments climbed alongside the panels, hinting at a clean-energy package moving together. The takeaway is hopeful even amid hard circumstances: when fossil fuels falter, the world…

