From Tick-Box to Tactical Advantage: Elevating Financial Crime Risk Assessments 

Article

From Tick-Box to Tactical Advantage: Elevating Financial Crime Risk Assessments 

Priya Giuliani

Partner

priyagiuliani@hka.com

Expert Profile

Risk assessments are supposed to be the backbone of an effective, risk-based approach to financial crime compliance. Yet, recent supervisory work from the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA)[1]Risk assessment processes and controls in firms: our findings | FCA, the Solicitors Regulatory Authority (SRA)[2]SRA | Client and matter risk assessments | Solicitors Regulation Authority and the Gambling Commission[3]Anti-money laundering and counter-terrorist financing casino casework trends: October 2025  all highlight the same thing: too many risk assessments remain generic, static, reactive, and disconnected from the realities of real world risk.  

For Money Laundering Reporting Officers, this creates more than just audit frustrations. A weak or superficial risk assessment is now a direct route to regulatory challenge, personal accountability, and reputational harm

Financial crime spans money laundering (ML), terrorist financing (TF), proliferation financing (PF), market abuse, sanctions evasion, facilitation of tax evasion, bribery & corruption, and fraud. When risk assessments fail, firms face more than audit findings; they expose themselves to regulatory penalties, financial loss, and high-profile reputational harm. 

This article explores what’s going wrong, why it matters, and how leaders can transform risk assessments into a decision-ready, data-driven tool that actively steers and supports business. We’ll examine regulatory expectations, common pitfalls, and practical steps that strengthen governance and provide demonstrable protection for regulators, auditors, and boards.  

Cornerstone of a riskbased approach 

Financial crime risk assessments are not optional, they are the foundation of a risk-based approach (RBA). Global standards start with the Financial Action Task Force[4]The Financial Action Task Force is an inter-governmental body established in 1989 by the Ministers of its Member jurisdictions. The mandate of the FATF is to set standards and to promote effective … Continue reading (FATF), whose very first Recommendation mandates risk assessments as the basis for applying controls. This principle is embedded in Anti-Money Laundering (AML) legislative and/or regulatory frameworks worldwide[5]In this article, reference to AML incorporates Counter-Terrorist Financing and Counter-Proliferation Financing..  

In the UK, obligations go further. Legislation such as the Bribery Act, the Criminal Finances Act, and the Economic Crime and Corporate Transparency Act all require risk assessments, amongst other controls, to demonstrate reasonable preventative procedures that provide a defence against corporate criminal liability for the facilitation of tax evasion, bribery, and fraud. Whilst not an explicit requirement, for market abuse[6]Market Watch 69 | FCA and sanctions[7]SRA | Complying with the UK Sanctions Regime | Solicitors Regulation Authority, risk assessments are still considered good practice.  

Beyond the UK, the trend is clear: regulators are strengthening expectations for risk assessments. The UAE[8]Rulebook CBUAE | HomeCBUAE | AML/CFT Supervision and its free zones[9]ADGM Anti-Money Laundering and Sanctions Rulebook (AML)DFSA AML Rulebook (January 2024) mandate enterprise-wide risk assessments with quantified methodologies and senior oversight. From 31 March 2026, Australia is shifting its AML requirements from a compliance-based approach to a risk-based, outcomes-oriented approach[10]AML/CTF Reform | AUSTRAC. This change will make the requirement for risk assessments explicit, will incorporate PF and codify the risk factors that should be considered. In the United States, risk assessments remain good practice under the BSA, but FinCEN’s 2024 proposal[11]FinCEN Fact Sheet, FIN-2024-FCT1, June 28, 2024 signals a move toward making them mandatory.  

Regulatory expectations regarding risk assessments continue to evolve. Regulators are mandating that risk assessments must identify, assess, mitigate, and manage risk with clear governance, evidential support, and a demonstrable link to controls, monitoring, and resourcing. FATF guidance is explicit: an RBA cannot exist without a credible risk assessment. How is it then that firms claim to operate a RBA without an adequate risk assessment? 

The regulatory drumbeat: poor quality is widespread 

Regulators are sounding the alarm: risk assessments are falling short across multiple sectors.  

The findings from the FCA multi-firm review are stark[12]Risk assessment processes and controls in firms: our findings | FCA

  • “Few firms” identify relevant risks and tailor assessments to their business – despite the mandated requirement to have a written risk assessment since 2017.  
  • Both Business-Wide Risk Assessments (BWRA) and Customer Risk Assessments (CRA) frequently lack detail, lack quantitative analysis, and evidence of control effectiveness and residual risk.  
  • Good practice “often goes beyond the minimum regulatory requirements” signalling rising expectations. 

The Solicitors Regulation Authority (SRA) echoes these concerns in the legal sector. Its Warning Notice[13]SRA | Client and matter risk assessments | Solicitors Regulation Authority highlights systemic issues with many firms lacking client and matter risk assessments. Other UK regulators, such as The Gambling Commission, report similar shortcomings; risk assessments that fail to consider all relevant risks and are disconnected from the control framework[14]Anti-money laundering and counter-terrorist financing casino casework trends: October 2025.  

Global scandals reinforce the consequences of inadequate risk assessment. From Danske Bank’s non-resident exposure, to HSBC’s failure to assess risks in Mexico, to Westpac’s blind spots in correspondent banking, the pattern is consistent illustrating how superficial, outdated, or siloed risk assessments can lead to material regulatory, financial, and reputational damage. 

Root Causes of Failure 

  1. Templated and generic narratives. Too many risk assessments are copypasted, bought in without sufficient firm input, or not effectively tailored to the business. It’s the easy option, the tick-box approach. Such risk assessments fail to reflect the nuances of specific products, transactions, channels, geographies, and customer segments. As a result, employees and senior management cannot articulate the financial crime risks because the output is too generic or misunderstood, and the risk assessment does not meet regulatory expectations. 
  1. Confusion between risk types. Some firms conflate inherent risk and operational risks. Confusing the two undermines credibility and leads to poor control evaluation and undermines the integrity of the BWRA.  

    Inherent risk is the level of financial crime risk that exists before the application of any controls. i.e. what is it about the nature of your business, the products you provide, the customers you target, the way you find them and interact with them, the geographies you and your clients operate in and the types of transactions they are expected to undertake that makes your firm susceptible to financial crime risk?  

    Operational risks are risks that your financial crime controls fail to mitigate in practice, which for the purposes of a BWRA should be assessed as part of your controls effectiveness and incorporated into ongoing testing plans.  

    If your inherent risk assessment describes risks in terms such as the: 
    – risk of onboarding a criminal  
    – risk a customer will launder the proceeds of crime through the institution 
    – risk a customer will provide false documentation 

    …then the assessment needs reworking. These are operational risks or control-failure scenarios, not inherent risks. 
  1. Over-reliance on qualitative judgement. Regulators repeatedly flag that risk assessments lack quantitative evidence. Many have no weightings, subfactors, exposure metrics, or databased rationales for scores and residual risk. Instead, they rely on undocumented qualitative judgments, making supervisory challenge uncomfortable. Some have no controls assessments or blindly present that the controls environment is effective despite there being evidence to the contrary. 
  1. Lack of documented methodology and transparency. Without a clear methodology, assurance is difficult and regulators question credibility. Unclear scoring mechanisms, untested thresholds, and undocumented inputs and risk ratings. The steps taken to complete your risk assessment must be documented as per MLR18(4). 
  1. Inadequate coverage of risk types. Despite explicit regulatory emphasis, TF and PF are frequently poorly covered. Other risk types such as fraud, facilitation of tax evasion, and bribery & corruption also tend to receive limited coverage. This narrow scope leaves firms vulnerable to emerging threats. 
  1. Weak governance and limited senior challenge. Assessments are not updated alongside growth, new products, or acquisitions. Senior oversight is inconsistent, sometimes focusing narrowly on fraud while neglecting sanctions, bribery, or ML risks. Governance gaps also mean findings rarely translate into documented remediation plans, owners, timelines, or tracked delivery. 
  1. Dormant documents with no follow-through. Risk assessments exist ‘on paper’ but do not drive decision making, resourcing, or monitoring design. They become compliance artefacts rather than live tools, another ‘tick-box’ solution leaving firms exposed to regulatory criticism. 
  1. Over-reliance on technology without understanding. Firms increasingly depend on automated scoring models but cannot explain how these models work or validate their outputs. This creates blind spots and undermines confidence in the risk assessment process. 
  1. Knowledge and resource gaps. Too often, responsibility falls to junior staff without sufficient support or investment from senior management, resulting in rushed, underdeveloped outputs. Producing an effective risk assessment requires deep business knowledge, financial crime and risk assessment expertise. 
  1. Lack of industry-wide risk standardisation. Beyond certain anchors, e.g., foreign PEPs and correspondent banking which are generally considered higher risk, many risk factors remain subjective and are left to a firm’s own discretion meaning inconsistent approaches, and  making supervisory evaluation and peer benchmarking difficult. 

Practical Steps to Get it Right 

  1. Right knowledge and resources. Conducting a robust risk assessment takes time and expertise. It is far better to perform the risk assessment internally, as no one understands your business better than you do. However, if you have not done one before, it can be helpful to bring in external expertise to coach you through the process and drive the right outcomes. When engaging external resources, validate their  experience in conducting risk assessments and ensure they understand key concepts such as the difference between inherent and operational risk, leaving you with a risk assessment that your business owns, understands, and can maintain. 
  1. Keep it simple and tailor to your business. Start with a practical approach. If your business is not overly complex, use a simple spreadsheet to capture risks discussed in small workshops with relevant stakeholders. Workshops bring together risk and financial crime experts, and business specialists, fostering collaboration and knowledge-sharing. Systematically review the five core risk factors  (customers, jurisdictions, products, transactions, and channels) and document how each creates risk for your business. 
  1. Use data to power your risk assessment. Data helps identify risks and adds credibility and precision to scoring. Incorporate both external and internal sources: 

    External data:  
    – national risk assessments, FATF updates, regulatory trends and sector typologies help identify risks relevant to your business. Do not deviate from industry or national risk assessments unless you have a robust reason to do so, which should be fully documented; and 
    – enforcement notices and open-source information provide insight into crystalised events, such as reputational risk pertaining to Politically Exposed Persons. These can be used to assess impact. 

    Internal data: 
    – customer and transaction data to strengthen likelihood scoring;
    – outcome data such as SAR trends, incident logs, and screening hits highlight risks and aid likelihood scoring; and 
    – assurance results validate controls evaluation.   
  1. Document the methodology. Your methodology should be detailed enough for someone new to replicate the process and achieve similar results. It should capture the sources of data, the risk scoring logic including weightings and aggregations methodology. Document any formulas or code embedded in spreadsheets. Transparent calculation logic supports internal audit and regulatory scrutiny and helps answer the inevitable “why did you score this as low?” moments. 
  1. Make it forwardlooking by design. Risk assessments should not be backward looking snapshots. The use for a 2025 risk assessment in 2026 is limited. Define and quantify risk at the time of execution and anticipate future risks. Incorporate future business strategy, horizon scanning, scenario analysis, and stress testing. Consider geopolitical shifts (sanctions regimes), technology changes (crypto asset exposure), and typology evolution (mule networks, cyberenabled laundering). Use “Whatif” scenarios, for example sudden sanctions expansion or entry into higherrisk corridors, and premap control requirements and resourcing impacts. Make risk assessments strategic, not static. 
  1. Review dynamically, not just annually. Don’t wait for the annual cycle. Trigger off-cycle reassessments for new products, market entries, major client onboarding changes, or sanctions events. Document the review process in your methodology to demonstrate responsiveness. 
  1. Embed governance and challenge. Good practice goes beyond regulatory minimums as highlighted by the FCA. Share the BWRA or a summary report with senior management and the Board. Ensure action plans include resource requirements, ownership, and deadlines; track progress through to completion. Document challenges to assumptions and decisions to demonstrate robust oversight. 
  1. Don’t leave it in the drawer: make the assessment work for you. The mark of a mature programme is how visibly the risk assessment drives business decisions: 
  • Governance & strategy: Use BWRA outputs to set and monitor adherence to risk appetite, and inform growth decisions; minute board and senior management discussions to demonstrate engagement and accountability. 
  • Continuous improvement: Maintain an action log tied to each assessment finding; regulators have flagged the absence of recorded actions and owners as poor practice.  
  • Link to controls. For example, ensure risks identified in the BWRA align with transaction monitoring scenarios. 
  • Monitoring: Align monitoring controls with the BWRA output; for example, more frequent reviews of high-risk areas and weaker controls. 
  • Resource allocation: Prioritise headcount, tooling, and training where residual risk is highest, evidenced by metrics rather than anecdote.  
  • Train to the risk. Direct training budgets to areas the BWRA show as rising risk. Ensure training covers risk pertinent to the business, not generic financial crime training. 

Conclusion: from compliance artefact to strategic instrument 

If the past few years have taught us anything, it’s that a weak risk assessment is not merely an audit finding, it’s a strategic blind spot that can snowball into regulatory, financial, and reputational harm. The FCA’s 2025 multi-firm review and the SRA’s enforcement record reinforce the expectation that firms must produce tailored, evidenced, forward-looking assessments, and actively use them to steer controls, monitoring, and investment.  

Leaders who embrace a data-rich, scenario-driven, governance-anchored approach will transform risk assessments from a tick-box obligation into a tactical advantage. One that keeps pace with evolving typologies, supports credible risk appetite, and builds trust with regulators, boards, and customers alike. 

Review your current risk assessment framework. Ask: 

  • Is it tailored to your business model? 
  • Does it integrate data and anticipate future risks? 
  • Does it drive governance, resource allocation, and monitoring decisions? 
  • Is the outcome aligned to my understanding of the business?  Does it make sense? 

If the answer is “no” to any of these, now is the time to act. A well-designed risk assessment is more than a regulatory requirement, it is the foundation of your RBA and a strategic instrument that protects and strengthens your business and positions it for sustainable growth. 

How can HKA help

HKA is an independent consultancy with specialists in financial crime compliance, fraud and integrity risk management, remediation and response matters. Our experts assist financial institutions, corporates, charitable and purpose-driven organisations, and public sector organisations in navigating complex regulatory landscapes, strengthening compliance frameworks, and aligning with global and industry standards.

About the Author:

Priya Giuliani is a specialist in financial crime investigations & compliance with nearly 30 years’ experience, including a decade as a Partner. She specialises in helping clients on a proactive basis to assess and manage the risk of financial crime including assessing governance, oversight, conduct, and training Senior Managers and Boards. Her investigative experience provides insight in to how various financial crime types (e.g. money laundering, terrorist and proliferation financing, sanctions and tax evasion, bribery, corruption and fraud) can occur, including through the use of professional enablers, and the controls required to manage these risks effectively. Priya has been appointed on many Skilled Person engagements. Widely regarded as a well-qualified and highly experienced expert in financial crime risk management and investigations. She understands risk well and works with clients to assess and develop proportionate and effective control frameworks.

HKA appoints Jim Johnson as Partner in Forensic Technical Services

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HKA appoints Jim Johnson as Partner in Forensic Technical Services

HKA is pleased to announce the appointment of Jim Johnson as a Partner within its Forensic Technical Services team. Based in the UK, Jim will support HKA’s portfolio of dispute resolution and expert witness work across the infrastructure, energy, and built environment sectors. His appointment reinforces HKA’s strategic focus on deep technical expertise and senior, court-tested experts in the UK and internationally. 

A Chartered Engineer (CEng, MICE) with 40 years in the consulting engineering sector and more than 20 years as a Director at Arup including board-level responsibilities, Jim brings broad infrastructure lifecycle experience and a proven expert witness track record. He has acted on over twenty forensic geotechnical investigations and has provided written and oral evidence in the Technology & Construction Court, including concurrent evidence under the Civil Procedure Rules. Jim’s casework spans foundation and ground movement disputes, slope stability, settlement and subsidence, earthworks and retaining structures, and asset performance issues across complex projects. 

“Jim’s appointment strengthens our ability to provide strategic, multidisciplinary expertise on complex disputes. His leadership experience and technical depth in geotechnics, risk, and sustainability will be invaluable as we continue to deliver even greater value to clients facing complex challenges in infrastructure, energy, and the built environment, globally.” 

Dr Kourosh Kayvani, Partner, Head of Forensic Technical Services International, HKA

Beyond his dispute-focused work, Jim has held global and regional leadership roles across assurance and risk, digital transformation, innovation, and sustainability, shaping strategies and governance frameworks for major infrastructure programmes. He has chaired alliance and JV boards, led multi-disciplinary engineering teams from feasibility through commissioning, and has helped advance data-enabled practice and climate-aligned decision-making across the sector. 

“The intersection of engineering, sustainability, and risk management in a data-enabled environment is critical for today’s infrastructure projects. HKA’s commitment to excellence in expert services aligns perfectly with my passion for delivering clarity and assurance in high-stakes environments. I look forward to applying my geotechnical expertise and infrastructure leadership experience to help clients resolve complex technical disputes, deliver clear, objective analysis, and support robust decision-making in litigation, arbitration, and investigations.” 

Jim Johnson, Partner, Forensic Technical Services, HKA

Jim holds an MA (Hons) in Engineering Science (Oxon) and is a Member of the Institution of Civil Engineers. He has completed executive programmes with Cambridge Judge Business School (Advanced Leadership), the Cambridge Institute for Sustainability Leadership (CISL), and the Royal College of Art (Open Innovation Fellowship). His broader industry contributions include steering and advisory roles with organisations such as FIDIC’s Global Leadership Forum Advisory Board (steering white papers on infrastructure and AI and the Gap to Net Zero) and the Cambridge Centre for Smart Infrastructure & Construction. 

For more information about HKA, visit hka.com and connect with us on LinkedIn, X (formerly Twitter, @HKAGlobal) and Facebook.

Media contact

NameJill Dawson
TitleSenior Marketing and Communications Manager
Number+44 20 7618 1200
Emailjilldawson@hka.com

HKA announces the appointment of Noémi Klein as Director in the Investigations & Compliance team in London​ 

News

HKA announces the appointment of Noémi Klein as Director in the Investigations & Compliance team in London​ 

HKA is delighted to announce that Noémi Klein has been appointed as Director in the Investigations & Compliance team within its Forensic Accounting & Commercial Damages practice, based in London. 

Noémi brings more than a decade of experience in financial crime risk management, compliance, and investigations across banking, consulting, and legal sectors. She has led complex engagements spanning anti-money laundering (AML), fraud prevention, anti-bribery and corruption (ABC), and sanctions, helping organisations strengthen their frameworks and meet regulatory expectations. 

A recognised subject matter expert in trade finance and sanctions, Noémi has been engaged on FCA appointed Skilled Person Reviews, designed and executed Business-Wide Risk Assessments (BWRAs), and led Target Operating Model (TOM) transformations. Her recent work includes large-scale remediation projects for international financial institutions, fraud risk assessments aligned to emerging legislation, and testing of financial crime controls for major banks to enhance compliance and mitigate risk on behalf of the regulator. 

“I’m thrilled to join HKA’s Investigations & Compliance team at a time of heightened regulatory expectations and fast-evolving financial crime risks. HKA’s multidisciplinary model and global reach provide a powerful platform to deliver pragmatic, defensible outcomes across AML, sanctions, and fraud. I look forward to helping clients as they strengthen governance, respond confidently to regulatory scrutiny, and build resilient, future-fit frameworks through risk assessment, monitoring, and sustainable control enhancements,”

Noémi Klein, Director

Before joining HKA, Noémi held senior leadership and specialist roles at global consulting firms and international banks, including positions at FTI Consulting, Guidehouse, ING, Standard Chartered, PwC, Citibank, and MoneyGram International. She has managed multi-country surveillance operations, delivered operational risk frameworks, and supported regulatory engagement with authorities across Europe, Asia, the United States and the Middle East. She has successfully driven transformation programmes, implemented proactive risk mitigation strategies, and delivered measurable efficiencies across first and second lines of defence. 

Noémi is an active contributor to industry dialogue, frequently speaking and moderating at conferences and workshops, and authoring thought leadership on practical risk appetite, sanctions/export controls, and the operational effectiveness of financial crime controls. She has co-organised interactive sessions with industry associations and delivered large-scale training programmes for public and private sector audiences. 

“We’re delighted to welcome Noémi to the team. Her depth of expertise across financial crime, particularly in sanctions and trade finance, combined with a proven track record of delivering complex regulatory engagements, will further strengthen our offering. Noémi’s appointment reflects HKA’s continued investment in top-tier talent to support clients with their most demanding compliance and investigations challenges.” 

Priya Giuliani, Partner,

For more information about HKA, visit hka.com and connect with us on LinkedIn, X (formerly Twitter, @HKAGlobal) and Facebook.

Media contact

NameJill Dawson
TitleSenior Marketing and Communications Manager
Number+44 20 7618 1200
Emailjilldawson@hka.com

Culture isn’t a Patch. It’s the Platform

Article

Culture isn’t a Patch. It’s the Platform

Priya Giuliani

Partner

priyagiuliani@hka.com

Expert Profile

Purpose + Design + Accountability = Measurable Behaviour

Culture is the invisible operating system of your organisation. You rarely notice it, until it crashes. And, when it does, the consequences aren’t just inconvenient; they’re catastrophic. Think of the billions lost to fines, reputational damage, and leadership churn after cultural failures. Decisions stall, trust erodes, and risk spirals.

Regulators know this. They call culture the foundation of effective risk management and compliance. But here’s the twist: they don’t prescribe what your culture should look like. No templates. No checklists. Why? Because culture isn’t a policy – it’s behaviour. It’s ‘the way things are done around here.’

For years, firms have poured billions into compliance processes, technology, and tick‑box training. Yet the same failures keep resurfacing.  Why would you spend billions to end up with the same issue? Why don’t we learn from others’ failures? Because often changes implemented are quick fixes or patches applied in response to a regulatory pressure rather than a reset of the underlying behaviours that drive decisions.

A robust culture isn’t a quick win. It’s a long-term investment that pays dividends in resilience, risk mitigation, customer trust, and sustainable growth. But changing culture means understanding how humans think and act which is not easy, especially as AI begins to influence decision-making and workplace behaviours. Most people intend to do the right thing, but good intentions don’t always translate into good actions. Culture isn’t about values on a wall, it’s about the behaviours people choose under real-world pressures. Controls and technology can help, but they don’t guarantee those choices. Regulators and auditors are catching up to this truth, reframing culture as something observable, measurable, and auditable: behaviour.

Why Behaviour Matters

Culture fails when behaviour fails. Regulators and the internal audit profession reflect this reality: controls and technology are necessary, but not sufficient. People, and the choices they make, remain central.

In December 2025, The Institute of Internal Auditors’ (IIA)[1]The Institute of Internal Auditors Releases Organizational Behavior Topical Requirement | Press Room reframed ‘culture audits’ into a structured assessment of behaviour‑related risks, setting a minimum baseline for governance, risk management, and controls that influence how people act in the workplace. Why does this matter? Because most compliance failures aren’t caused by missing policies, they’re caused by human shortcuts or workarounds. Under pressure, good intentions can collapse into bad decisions.

Incorporating behavioural science into organisational processes can help to transform compliance and culture. Rather than relying solely on rules and technology, behavioural science offers a multidisciplinary framework for shaping compliant organisational behaviour. It provides an understanding of the cognitive biases and contextual factors that shape individual and collective decision-making. Drawing on principles from economics, psychology, sociology, and neuroscience these solutions are not typically expensive, but they do require careful design and at times, experimentation.

Behavioural science helps to explain why traditional compliance can fail to prevent poor decisions. Three foundational insights are particularly relevant:

  • Humans respond to incentives[2]Motivating vaccination with financial incentives – ScienceDirect. If metrics and rewards place more emphasis on sales or speed, behaviours will follow, even if policies say otherwise.
  • Humans care about social norms and relative outcomes[3]Social Norms (Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy). Most people want to belong so they align with their peers.
  • Humans feel losses more intensely than equivalent gains (‘loss aversion’)[4]Loss Aversion – The Decision Lab. Framing compliance around potential losses, such as clients, careers, and licences, can be more compelling than vague benefits.

These dynamics show up in everyday conduct failures:

Designing environments where the right action is the easy action, and the wrong one is harder, is essential.

The urgency is real. Enforcement is intensifying worldwide with regulators imposing tougher penalties for failures in financial crime compliance, governance, misconduct and consumer harm. Annual global fines in banking[5]BNP Paribas US$8.9bn, TD Bank US$3.1bn, Goldman 1MDB US$2.9bn, Danske Bank Estonia US$2bn, HSBC US$1.9bn, digital assets[6]Binance US$4.3bn, OKX US$500m, Coinbase Europe €21.5m and gambling[7]Platinum Gaming £10m, William Hill £19.2m run into the billions year after year.  Ineffective, or lack of appropriate controls are costly. Unless firms do something different, this trend will likely worsen as supervisors gain more powers across other sectors like law and accountancy.

Assessing Organisational Behaviour

If we acknowledge that culture fails when behaviours fail and behaviour drives outcomes, then measuring and managing behaviour becomes non-negotiable.

Today regulators and auditors expect more than slogans or values; they want evidence. That’s why the IIA has reframed its culture audits into structured assessments of organisational behaviour. The question is no longer “Do you have a good culture?” Ask yourself, “Can you demonstrate, with evidence, that organisational behaviours align with your purpose and risk appetite?”

The IIA treats organisational behaviour as the observable choices employees make and a subset of culture, translating ‘how things are done around here’ into verifiable expectations and evidence. Its codified approach is organised into 15 Governance, Risk Management, and Controls requirements that internal audit must assess.

Here are some examples of what this looks like in practice:

ElementRequirementAction
OversightBoards and senior management must define behavioural expectations and hold employees accountableDocument accountability maps and retain evidence of consequence management
Risk ManagementFirms must identify gaps between expected and actual behaviours, analyse root causes, and communicate findings consistentlyBehavioural risk assessments and dashboards to be included in Audit committee packs  
Control Design and IncentivesOrganisations must show how controls and reward structures mitigate higher risk behavioursMap incentives to compliance outcomes and track override rates  

Regulatory Expectations

Internal audit isn’t the only voice calling for behavioural evidence, regulators share the same view. The UK’s Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) defines culture as the habitual behaviours and mindsets that characterise an organisation. It neither prescribes a single culture nor tries to assess mindsets directly. Instead, FCA speeches [8]Culture is contagious | FCA emphasise that ‘culture drives conduct and decision making‑’, and that non-financial misconduct (such as bullying or ‑harassment) signals a failing culture. The FCA expects leaders to manage the drivers of behaviour and it supervises firms based on how effectively these drivers reduce harm[9]Culture and governance | FCA:  

The tide is turning. Systems and controls alone are not enough. Technology, including AI, can streamline processes and enhance detection, but it cannot replace judgement or integrity. Organisations must demonstrate the effectiveness of their frameworks and people remain the critical variable. Effective risk management demands critical thinking and sound judgement at every level, especially when interpreting AI-driven insights.

The buck stops with leadership. Can you prove that your culture works, not just in theory but with evidence?

Behaviour Determines Outcomes

Regulators and auditors agree that culture is about the choices people make every day. Proving those choices align with purpose and risk appetite requires more than policies, it demands behavioural design. The challenge for leaders is clear ‘How do you turn principles into predictable actions under real-world pressure?

Traditional training often treats compliance as content delivery: read, click, done. Unsurprisingly, many employees complete mandatory training only when chased by a plethora of emails, signalling compliance is secondary. Behavioural science, and countless enforcement cases, show that choices are shaped by context, incentives, friction, social norms, and leadership signals. In the chaos of everyday life, convenience often beats principles in decision making unless organisations deliberately design environments to make ‘the right thing’ the easiest, and most obvious, choice.

To shift this, organisations should consider three principles:

  • Purpose: connect rules to the harm they prevent and the trust they create. This aligns with regulatory emphasis, is more motivating to the workforce reframing compliance from a perceived brake on business growth to a recognised driver of value and a catalyst for sustainable profitability and customer trust.
  • Design: engineer choice architecture so the right thing is easier than the wrong thing; apply default options, integrity prompts, and pre-commitments transparently and ethically.
  • Accountability: measure what matters and act consistently on deviations to reward integrity and deter misconduct. This expectation is embedded in IIA’s focus on accountability structures.

These principles set the stage for practical action.

Seven Levers to Operationalise the Right Behaviours

Turning principles into predictable actions requires deliberate design. These seven levers help organisations embed integrity into everyday decisions, turning integrity from aspiration into operation.

1) Purpose: Make the “Why” Unmissable

Rules without meaning feel like bureaucracy; rules tied to purpose feel like responsibility. When employees understand the harm a control prevents, compliance becomes personal.  

Practical moves:

  • Build purpose narratives into policies: every critical control gets a short “harm prevented” vignette and a client-impact case study
  • Use training time to explore the ‘why’ behind controls, not just the ‘what’ and ‘how’
  • Measure effectiveness by periodically asking employees to articulate the purpose of key controls

2) Social Norms: Define the In-Group

Social norms are the unspoken behavioural rules shared by people in a given group. They can influence, for instance, how to dress in the office, how people greet each other, or how to execute operational processes. People want to belong. Social norms can shape behaviour more than rules.

Practical moves:

  • Use change agents to model the desired behaviours
  • Publish ‘This is how we do it here’ micro-standards in short plain English (or local equivalent) guides for recurring risky processes
  • Deploy norm nudges: show aggregated peer adherence (e.g., “92% of employees completed their annual training ahead of the deadline”) to encourage alignment.

3) Ethical Nudges: Timely, Visible, Specific

Nudges are subtle design features that influence people to comply with organisational behavioural expectations. Defaults, prompts, and precommitments can steer decisions towards integrity, without removing choice. Design these nudges transparently as the goal is ethical influence, not coercion.

Practical moves:

  • Defaults: preselect safer paths (e.g., automatic EDD for PEPs; default four-eyes checks on high-risk overrides)
  • Prompts:  insert pause points before risky actions such as ‘truthfulness reminders’ at expense submission;
  • Precommitments: require brief attestations on a regular basis, for example, “I will not override risk limits without prior written approval”.

4) Friction: Make the Wrong Thing Harder

Friction determines how easy, or difficult, it is for people to comply. If compliance feels like climbing a mountain, most will look for shortcuts. The goal is to remove unnecessary friction from processes where we want people to do the right thing (e.g., SAR submission pathways, KYC document capture) and add friction where we want to make harmful behaviour harder (multi-factor authentication (MFA) for sensitive actions, four-eyes for high-risk overrides).

Practical moves:

  • Map end-to-end journeys to identify compliance friction points, then redesign
  • Reduce clicks, simplify forms, and automate evidence trails to make the right behaviours easier; add MFA to riskier processes or second-line approvals to high-risk overrides
  • Track before/after metrics (error rates, cycle time, exception volumes) to evidence improvement for audit and regulators.

5) Tone from the Top and Middle-Out: Walk the Talk

Regulators expect leaders to set the tone that drives good conduct and decision-making. Employees take their cues from leadership. If the board and senior managers demonstrate integrity, accountability, and transparency, those values can cascade through the organisation.

Think about whose message people will respond to the most. The head of division may be a more powerful voice for the business rather than the Group CEO or Head of Compliance, who are just that bit removed. People are often more influenced by their local leaders (those that can impact performance ratings and bonuses) rather than corporate messages from the top. 

The tone from the top cannot get through the organisation if there is a level of permafrost in the form of middle management that has not bought into the tone from the top. Therefore, attention must be given to ensure that managers at all levels are aligned in the messaging and behaviours. Permafrost is a blockage to positive culture embedding through the organisation. It creates friction, and not the good kind. It slows transformation, breeds cynicism, and signals to staff that culture is optional.

Tone from the top isn’t just about what leaders say – it’s about what they do. Leaders must Walk the Talk –  i.e. model the behaviours they expect from others. If leaders say one thing and do another, the organisation will use the visual signals over the audio signals as a basis of understanding ‘how things are really done around here’. If leaders ignore breaches or cut corners, the message is clear: rules don’t matter. Culture is shaped by actions, not slogans.

Practical moves:

  • Run cascading leader-led conversations where business heads (not just Compliance) discuss real case studies, decisions, and consequences.
  • Melt the ‘permafrost’: diagnose middle-management blockers; use change agents, rotations, and skiplevel forums to ensure messages travel and behaviours align.

6) Speak Up, Listen Up: Close the Loop

A strong compliance culture isn’t just about rules – it’s about voice. Silence is the enemy of integrity. Many major conduct failures, from mis-selling scandals to market manipulation were preceded by warning signs that went unheard. The Post Office scandal is the perfect example of unheard warning signs, where reported issues were not aggregated and fully understood across the organisation. When people feel safe to speak up, and leaders actively listen, risks are surfaced early and addressed before they escalate.

Many employees still do not feel comfortable in blowing the whistle for fear of retaliation however may be more comfortable using external reporting lines to regulators, which in itself is an indicator of poor organisational culture. A strong culture means staff prefer using the organisation’s hotlines because they believe issues will be addressed promptly and fairly. External reporting should be a safety net, not the default.

Practical moves:

  • Analyse trends in whistleblowing reports for hidden systemic issues
  • Publish quarterly anonymised “You said / We did” summaries; include themes and actions in board packs.Track hotline responsiveness and resolution times; compareinternal vs external whistleblowing volumes
  • Use regulator data, where available, to benchmark and strengthen channels[10]Whistleblowing data | FCA and communicate protections under whistleblowing law

7) Incentives & Consequences: Measure What Matters

What gets measured gets managed.People pay attention to what is measured because measurement signals what matters to an organisation.

If commercial KPIs drown behavioural metrics, culture becomes optional. Loss aversion shows people respond strongly to potential losses. When integrity and conduct are tracked, discussed, and tied to performance, they become part of ‘how things are done around here’.

Practical moves:

  • Build Key Culture Risk Indicators: e.g., override rates, near misses, repeat findings, voice metrics, and too-good performance patterns
  • Tie behavioural KPIs to performance and pay; investigateanomalously high results for hidden conduct risks
  • Align disciplinary outcomes with non-financial misconduct expectations and regulatory references

Culture Is Everyone’s Responsibility

Culture doesn’t flash on the screen or demand attention, until it fails. And when it fails, there’s no restart button, no undo, no quick patch. Every decision , every conversation, every behaviour becomes a line of code in your organisational operating system.  If the code is clean, built on integrity, purpose, and accountability, the system runs smoothly. If the code is corrupted by shortcuts or silence, the crashes are inevitable, and ultimately very costly.

We all have a role in the development of the operating system. We write the code every day. We decide whether the platform is secure or vulnerable. Culture isn’t a project you finish, it’s the platform you live on . It powers trust, reputation, and resilience. It’s what keeps the lights on when the storm hits.

To strengthen your culture, design with intent. Make the right thing easy and the wrong harder. Walk the talk, don’t just draft the policy. Measure what matters, not just what’s profitable. And create an environment where integrity isn’t aspirational, it’s operational.

Regulators and auditors are asking for evidence. Boards are asking for assurance. Employees are asking for clarity. When someone asks, “How are things done around here?” the answer should be unmistakable: “with integrity, with purpose, and with pride, because that’s the code our system runs on”.

How can HKA help

HKA is an independent consultancy with specialists in financial crime compliance, fraud and integrity risk management, remediation and response matters. Our experts assist financial institutions, corporates, charitable and purpose-driven organisations, and public sector organisations in navigating complex regulatory landscapes, strengthening compliance frameworks, and aligning with global and industry standards.

About the Author:

Priya Giuliani is a specialist in financial crime investigations & compliance with nearly 30 years’ experience, including a decade as a Partner. She specialises in helping clients on a proactive basis to assess and manage the risk of financial crime including assessing governance, oversight, conduct, and training Senior Managers and Boards. Her investigative experience provides insight in to how various financial crime types (e.g. money laundering, terrorist and proliferation financing, sanctions and tax evasion, bribery, corruption and fraud) can occur, including through the use of professional enablers, and the controls required to manage these risks effectively. Priya has been appointed on many Skilled Person engagements. Widely regarded as a well-qualified and highly experienced expert in financial crime risk management and investigations. She understands risk well and works with clients to assess and develop proportionate and effective control frameworks.

HKA experts underscore the critical role of experts in PFAS Litigation

News

HKA experts underscore the critical role of experts in PFAS Litigation

As Featured in Corporate Disputes Q&A

PFAS litigation is one of the most pressing challenges in environmental and commercial disputes today. HKA is pleased to announce that two of our leading environmental experts, Alex Lee, Partner and Geraint Williams, Associate Technical Director, have been featured in the January edition of Corporate Disputes magazine mini-roundtable exploring the escalating complexities of PFAS litigation and the indispensable role of expert witnesses in high-stakes disputes. 

“Expert testimony is often the linchpin in PFAS disputes, where outcomes hinge on intricate scientific and technical evidence. Legal strategies succeed when supported by precise technical insight and clear communication to audiences without scientific backgrounds.” 

Geraint Williams, Associate Technical Director, HKA

PFAS (per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances) litigation is rapidly expanding globally, driven by heightened regulatory scrutiny, evolving toxicological science and mounting claims for environmental and health impacts. The Q&A examines why expert witnesses are indispensable in these cases and how science and law intersect in this complex litigation. 

“Experts play a vital role in translating complex PFAS science into defensible arguments that stand up in court. PFAS litigation has grown in scale and complexity, spanning environmental cases, consumer product claims, and even commercial transactions. Courts rely on experts to interpret toxicology, exposure modelling, and contamination patterns to ensure arguments are scientifically robust and legally defensible.” 

Alex Lee, Partner, HKA

The Q&A discussion also underscores: 

  • Challenges in proving causation and tracing contamination sources 
  • Evolving regulations and toxicology and their impact on litigation strategies 
  • Global litigation trends, including multibillion-dollar settlements and emerging cases in the UK, EU, and beyond 

To read the full article within Corporate Disputes magazine click here

​For more information about HKA, visit hka.com and connect with us on LinkedIn, X (formerly Twitter, @HKAGlobal) and Facebook.​ 

Media contact

NameJill Dawson
TitleSenior Marketing and Communications Manager
Number+44 20 7618 1200
Emailjilldawson@hka.com

Laura Sochat has joined HKA’s Economics team in London as Director within our Forensic Accounting and Commercial Damages Practice

News

Laura Sochat has joined HKA’s Economics team in London as Director within our Forensic Accounting and Commercial Damages Practice

HKA is pleased to announce that Laura Sochat has joined our Economics team in London as Director within our Forensic Accounting and Commercial Damages Practice. Laura’s appointment strengthens our ability to deliver market-leading economic insight in international arbitration, investor-state disputes, and energy sector advisory. 

Laura brings over a decade of experience in economics consulting and academia, with a strong focus on the energy sector, regulatory and policy advisory, and international arbitration, including high-profile investor-state disputes. She has acted as both project manager and appointed expert in cases spanning multiple jurisdictions, providing economic analysis, financial and economic modelling for damages estimation and asset valuation, structuring and writing expert reports, and preparing, attending, and testifying at final hearings. 

Her experience includes advising on regulatory frameworks and market design for integrated energy companies and utilities, as well as leading strategic engagements for industry bodies. Laura has worked extensively on disputes involving LNG production, power generation, and energy infrastructure, alongside valuation and damages assessments in investor-state and commercial arbitration contexts. 

“HKA’s reputation for excellence and its commitment to delivering robust, insightful analysis in complex disputes aligns perfectly with my experience and passion. I’m thrilled to be joining HKA and look forward to working with colleagues across Europe, and globally to support clients in navigating challenging regulatory and commercial issues in the energy sector and beyond.” 

Laura Sochat, Director, HKA

Beyond her client work, Laura is an active contributor to the wider professional community and a strong advocate for diversity and inclusion. She co-founded WEconnect, a network promoting diversity in arbitration, and regularly speaks at leading industry events, including GAR Women in Arbitration, Energy Law Group, and Paris Arbitration Week. Laura has been recognised in Lexology Index’s Expert Witness Future Leaders ranking and published in the Investment Treaty Arbitration Review. She also served as co-chair of the pro bono committee and led European engagement for diversity and inclusion in her previous role. 

“Laura’s arrival augments and reinforces our global Economics practice, particularly in energy and investor-state arbitration. Her experience as an expert witness and her leadership in complex disputes will be invaluable as we continue to expand our capabilities internationally.”  

Chris Williams, Partner, Head of Economics, International at HKA

Prior to joining HKA, Laura was a Principal in the Energy Practice at CRA International and previously worked in competition economics. She began her career as a Teaching Fellow in the Economics Department at the University of Warwick, teaching microeconomics, macroeconomics, money and banking, statistics, and econometrics. Laura holds an MSc in Economics and International Financial Economics from the University of Warwick and a BSc in Economics from the University of Essex. 

For more information about HKA, visit hka.com and connect with us on LinkedIn, X (formerly Twitter, @HKAGlobal) and Facebook.

Media contact

NameJill Dawson
TitleSenior Marketing and Communications Manager
Number+44 20 7618 1200
Emailjilldawson@hka.com

HKA experts contribute to DLA Insights 2026: AI and sustainability are transforming data centre design

News

HKA experts contribute to DLA Insights 2026: AI and sustainability are transforming data centre design

HKA experts Helen Collie, Ken McLean, and Gerry Brannigan have contributed to DLA’s Online Insights 2026, offering a forward-looking analysis of how artificial intelligence (AI), sustainability mandates, and evolving client requirements are reshaping the design and delivery of data centres worldwide. 

They highlight that traditional design templates, designed for storage and legacy workloads, are rapidly becoming obsolete. AI-driven compute density is driving unprecedented power and cooling demands, while net-zero targets and fire safety considerations add further complexity. These pressures are forcing a fundamental rethink of design standards and delivery models. 

“Data centres are entering a new era. Success will depend on anticipating change rather than reacting to it. That means integrating advanced cooling technologies, planning for grid constraints, and embedding sustainability solutions from the outset.” 

Helen Collie, Partner, Forensic Technical Services, EMEA

The insights warn that insufficient grid capacity, late-stage equipment changes, and speed-to-build pressures will intensify delivery risks unless teams adopt collaborative, multi-disciplinary design processes. Future-ready facilities will require early integration of technologies such as liquid and immersion cooling, alongside energy recovery strategies like district heat network connections to avoid costly clashes. 

  • Mechanical, electrical, and plumbing (MEP) systems now sit at the heart of data centre complexity. AI workloads are driving the adoption and research of advanced cooling technologies (e.g., liquid and immersion systems) that must be planned and integrated early to avoid clashes and inefficiencies. 
  • Structural delivery must accommodate mission-critical equipment safely and efficiently, often within non-traditional layouts dominated by cooling and power infrastructure. Speed-to-build pressures can clash with the precision required for complex systems. 

In DLA’s Insight’s article, HKA’s experts set out five key predictions for the year ahead 

“Teams that build for tomorrow, not yesterday, will win. Considering radical changes in layout and technology integration, escalating coordination risks, and stepping up to the growing influence of sustainability and procurement challenges will help reduce scope gaps and ensure projects that are fit for the future. The future of data centres is multi-disciplinary and deeply coordinated.” 

Gerry Brannigan, Partner, Forensic Technical Services Growth Development Lead

Read the full article here

For more information about HKA, visit hka.com and connect with us on LinkedIn, X (formerly Twitter, @HKAGlobal) and Facebook.

Media contact

NameJill Dawson
TitleSenior Marketing and Communications Manager
Number+44 20 7618 1200
Emailjilldawson@hka.com

HKA is pleased to announce the appointment of Sudhir Arora as Director within its Forensic Technical Services (FTS) team.

News

HKA is pleased to announce the appointment of Sudhir Arora as Director within its Forensic Technical Services (FTS) team.

Sudhir, who joined the business in January, will be based in the UK, supporting HKA’s portfolio of dispute resolution and expert witness work across the energy and infrastructure sectors. His appointment reflects HKA’s strategic focus on strengthening its technical expertise in the UK and internationally.

A Chartered Process Engineer with more than 34 years of experience in the energy sector, Sudhir has worked with leading engineering, operating, and fabrication organisations across Africa, Asia, Europe, and the Middle East. He brings deep expertise in oil and gas production, refinery processes, gas treatment, produced water treatment, utilities, and sustainable solutions, including CO₂ capture, hydrogen combustion, and flare gas recovery.

“I’m delighted to join HKA and contribute to its forensic technical expert services in energy and infrastructure. I look forward to applying my process engineering and project management experience to support clients in resolving complex disputes and delivering robust forensic analysis.”

Sudhir Arora, Director

Prior to joining HKA, Sudhir held senior leadership roles at Birwelco Ltd, where he served as Joint General Manager, and at Worley Parsons and Maloney Metalcraft Ltd, managing multi-discipline engineering teams, delivering complex projects from feasibility through to commissioning. His experience spans process engineering design and optimisation, steady state and dynamic modelling, safety audits, HazOp studies, and technical sales for sustainability solutions.

“We are thrilled to welcome Sudhir to the team. His extensive experience in process engineering and sustainability solutions, combined with his leadership in major oil and gas projects, will be a valuable asset to our clients and our growing expert offering in the UK.”

Trevor Butler, Partner, Forensic Technical Services

Sudhir holds an MSc in Process Systems Engineering from Imperial College London and a BSc (Hons) in Chemical Engineering from Loughborough University of Technology. He is a Chartered Engineer and a corporate member of the Institution of Chemical Engineers (UK).

For more than forty years, HKA has helped clients navigate forensic engineering and technical challenges across the energy and infrastructure sectors. The firm’s work spans complex   technical disputes, regulatory compliance, asset integrity, and emerging technologies, backed by practical expertise from major projects worldwide.

For more information about HKA, visit hka.com and connect with us on LinkedIn, X (formerly Twitter, @HKAGlobal) and Facebook.

Media contact

NameJill Dawson
TitleSenior Marketing and Communications Manager
Number+44 20 7618 1200
Emailjilldawson@hka.com

HKA is pleased to announce the appointment of Hermano Oliveira as a Director in its Forensic Accounting and Commercial Damages practice, based in Paris 

News

HKA is pleased to announce the appointment of Hermano Oliveira as a Director in its Forensic Accounting and Commercial Damages practice, based in Paris 

Hermano is a seasoned consultant with over 20 years of experience in consultancy, advising public and private clients across Europe, and worldwide, from energy and infrastructure sectors. He has acted as an expert consultant in high-profile assignments for ministries, regulators, energy companies, law firms, and infrastructure investment funds.

Having worked extensively in the energy sector, particularly across the gas, electricity, and renewable energy – including hydrogen, biofuels, synthetic fuels, and renewable gases.  

He brings a strategic and economic vision for project development and investment decisions, combined with in-depth technical expertise in contract negotiation, to help clients navigate a complex and constantly evolving environment. His expertise spans economic analysis, strategic guidance, and dispute resolution, including support for arbitration dispute cases.  

Hermano provides end-to-end expert advisory services across the energy value chain, helping clients navigate complex regulatory frameworks, design and negotiate long-term contracts, and manage large-scale programs.  

“I’m delighted to join HKA, which is recognised for its technical excellence, deep expertise, and global reach. I look forward to leveraging my experience in energy and infrastructure to support clients in navigating complex regulatory, commercial, and strategic challenges across international markets.” 

Hermano Oliveira, Director, Forensic Accounting and Commercial Damages

His work includes policy and regulation, market modelling, tariff design, project finance, and due diligence.  

Prior to joining HKA, Hermano led strategic projects on international business development, decarbonisation, and smart grid deployment, and supported governments and corporations in negotiations and investment decisions.  

“We are thrilled to welcome Hermano to HKA. His depth of expertise in energy advisory, international arbitration, and strategic consulting strengthens our capabilities to address our clients’ needs with a focus on Europe and Africa. Hermano’s appointment reflects our commitment to delivering world-class expert services to our clients in the energy and infrastructure sectors globally.”   

Patrick Hebreard, Partner, Forensic Accounting and Commercial Damages  

Hermano holds degrees from ESSEC Business School (Strategy and International Business), Sciences Po Paris (Politics, Economics and Finance), and Champagne-Ardenne University (History). He also holds accredited certificates in “Regulation of the Power Sector”, “International Arbitration of Disputes”, and “Politics and Economics of International Energy”.  

For more information about HKA, visit hka.com and connect with us on LinkedIn, X (formerly Twitter, @HKAGlobal) and Facebook.

Media contact

NameJill Dawson
TitleSenior Marketing and Communications Manager
Number+44 20 7618 1200
Emailjilldawson@hka.com

Mastering Complexity with Curiosity

Article

Mastering Complexity with Curiosity

Alex Lee

Partner, Environmental Lead, EMEA

alexlee@hka.com

Expert Profile

Darren Mullins

Partner

darrenmullins@hka.com

Expert Profile

Jill Dawson (Author)

Senior Marketing & Communications Manager

jilldawson@hka.com

The Deepwater Horizon AI Investigation Strategy Challenge

Environmental law seldom offers easy answers, but every so often it presents a case so vast and so consequential that it reshapes the way we think about evidence, causation, liability, and corporate responsibility. Our recent AI investigation session, built around the Deepwater Horizon litigation, did exactly that. It united teams of lawyers, technologists and investigators in a competitive race to unpack the first phase of one of the most complex environmental cases ever tried in a US court.

It was fast. It was forensic. It was fun. And it provided a vivid demonstration of how modern investigation skills and emerging AI tools can sharpen legal thinking even in the most technically demanding disputes.

The Legal Backdrop

The Deepwater Horizon disaster remains a defining moment in environmental law. The 2013 Phase One trial before Judge Carl Barbier addressed the critical facts of the initial blowout itself which resulted in an estimated discharge of 4.9 million barrels of oil into the Gulf of Mexico.

  • How the drilling mud displacement decision was made despite anomalous pressure readings
  • How gas escaped its barriers and surged to the rig deck
  • How fire and explosions tore through the structure
  • And ultimately why the rig sank

Judge Barbier’s apportionment of responsibility is well documented: BP at 67 per cent, Transocean at 30 per cent, and Halliburton at 3 per cent. For those supporting BP’s defence in the ongoing proceedings, the task remains to challenge aspects of the government’s case, mitigate exposure, and ensure the evidence is read with precision rather than hindsight.

This complexity set the perfect stage for our recent AI challenge in our London office.

Turning the Trial into a Live Investigation Lab

Participants in teams of twos and threes were each handed a different themed research challenge drawn directly from Phase One. The goal was simple: use the tools of modern corporate investigation to produce rapid, accurate, and defensible insights. No shortcuts. No speculation. Every point had to be tethered to testimony, industry practice or regulatory standards.

The topics demanded sharp legal and technical reasoning. They included:

  1. mapping the decision making that led to displacing drilling mud
  2. comparing well control decisions against industry standards
  3. evaluating barrier management failures and testing regimes
  4. identifying prior incidents and drawing relevance to Macondo
  5. distilling Phase One’s lessons on corporate oversight
  6. testing the robustness of internal risk processes
  7. analysing the boundaries of liability between operators and contractors

Teams were pushed to reconstruct events in real time, weighing competing interpretations exactly as the court had done. The competitive element added energy. The collaboration added clarity. And the format revealed just how quickly legal professionals can move when armed with modern investigative AI tools and methodology.

Bringing Generative AI into the Mix

The second layer of the exercise was built around the emerging reality of corporate investigations: you cannot sensibly tackle multi-million document reviews without leveraging the most advanced technology. And you certainly cannot rely on intuition alone.

This was where the discussion shifted to generative AI and the growing maturity of Retrieval Augmented Generation (RAG). If Phase One of Deepwater Horizon taught us anything, it is that complex regulatory environments demand complete mastery of the evidential record. That is no longer feasible with search alone.

Investigators today face staggering data volumes in multiple languages and formats. Even the most powerful language models cannot ingest entire document populations. They operate within a finite context window. This means they can analyse deeply, but only if the right material is placed in front of them first.

This is where RAG transforms the investigative playbook. It joins intelligent search, precise document retrieval, contextual analysis and traceable reporting into a single workflow. For lawyers, the advantage is profound: answers are generated with clear evidence trails and audit chains. Nothing is invented. Everything is traceable.

When Human Judgement Meets Machine Acceleration

One of the most valuable lessons for the lawyers in the room was this: AI does not replace legal judgement. It extends it. It gives investigators reach and speed but does not relieve them of interpretation. The best outcomes come from teams that treat technology as a partner rather than a substitute.

This mirrors the approach now adopted in modern investigations. Counsel direct the scope. Specialists configure search parameters, manage privilege and design defensible workflows. AI accelerates identification of relevant material. And investigators integrate financial forensics, industry expertise and regulatory understanding to produce actionable findings.

The Deepwater Horizon challenge session demonstrated this in miniature. Teams who approached the task as a collaborative exercise between human expertise and machine analysis produced the most compelling results.

A Glimpse into the Future of Environmental Litigation

Environmental lawyers in particular stand to gain from these developments. Large scale environmental disputes generate vast quantities of monitoring data, technical logs, regulatory communications, contractor records and internal governance material. Traditional review methods are simply too slow for the realities of modern litigation.

Purpose built investigation platforms now offer audited evidence trails, multilingual processing and secure deployments that respect data sovereignty constraints. They also offer the kind of consumption-based pricing that allows legal departments to scale investigations without exorbitant capital expenditure.

The economics are increasingly impossible to ignore. With AI enhanced methodologies, review time can be reduced by more than half, while the completeness of findings often improves. When dealing with billions in potential liabilities, as the Deepwater Horizon proceedings illustrate, precision and efficiency are no longer luxuries but necessities.

What the Challenge Proved

The Deepwater Horizon session did more than revisit a landmark environmental case. It served as a vivid demonstration of how legal practice is evolving. Three messages emerged repeatedly throughout the competition.

First, environmental litigation is becoming more data intensive. The complexity of technical evidence will continue to expand.

Second, AI enabled investigation methods offer an immediate uplift in speed, accuracy and defensibility, especially when paired with specialist expertise.

Third, the future belongs to hybrid teams where legal, investigative and technological skills operate in concert.

For environmental lawyers, this evolving ecosystem should be welcomed. It promises clearer analysis, stronger factual foundations and a more efficient route to truth.

A Case that Still Teaches

Deepwater Horizon remains one of the most significant industrial and environmental trials of the century, but it is also a case study in how investigations should be run. It shows the danger of fragmented decision making, the importance of barrier discipline, the consequences of weak risk processes and the need for corporate oversight structures that stand up under operational stress.

Our AI challenge carried those lessons forward. It showed that when equipped with the right tools and the right mindset, legal teams can interrogate complex evidence faster, more rigorously and with greater strategic clarity.

The result was an upbeat, energetic demonstration of where corporate investigations are heading and how environmental lawyers can position themselves at the forefront of that change.

And above all, it reminded us of the most important principle: in high stakes environmental litigation, mastery of the evidence is everything. AI will not replace that truth. But it will help us reach it with speed and confidence.

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