NEW YORK (23 September 2025): "WWF applauds the Government of Brazil’s US$1 billion investment in the Tropical Forest Forever ...
NEW YORK (19 September 2025): WWF celebrates the latest ratifications of the UN High Seas Treaty, marking a milestone moment ...
For the first time, a comprehensive review of laws in 12 tiger range countries exposes critical gaps in legislation that may ...
Tropical regions face wildlife populations plummeting at a staggering rate Freshwater species populations have suffered an 83% fall The report’s Living Planet Index shows that there is no time to lose ...
A publication explaining how protected forests are crucial to sustainable drinking water supplies for world's biggest cities. A WWF/World Bank publication explaining the importance of protected ...
The temptation to skip to steps lower in the hierarchy that are easier or cheaper will at best provide a temporary bandaid to these complex global challenges and at worst, cannibalize efforts for ...
Today, WWF France, in partnership with the French multinational AXA insurance, launched a new report, Into the Wild: integrating nature into investment strategies. Jointly presenting the report to ...
As floods and droughts ravage communities and countries worldwide, a WWF report published today highlights the capacity of healthy rivers to help mitigate these natural disasters but warns that all ...
BEIJING (February 28, 2015) -- The worldwide population of wild giant pandas increased by 268 over the last decade according to a new survey conducted by the government of China. The increase in ...
Healthy nature is an ally that helps prevent climate breakdown and make us more resilient to a warming planet. The latest science from the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) shows that ...
Biodiversity is most simply defined as the variety of plant and animal life in the world or in a particular habitat. Human livelihoods, and even industrial production, are also dependent on what are ...
Eleven places in the world will account for over 80 per cent of forest loss globally by 2030. Jakarta: Eleven places in the world – 10 of which are in the tropics – will account for over 80 per cent ...