Ahead of the Paris Olympics, WWF is highlighting the climate records being shattered that the world doesn’t want to break, and calling for countries to fight climate change and act for the planet.
On World Wildlife Day, 3 March, we're celebrating our incredible natural world and the remarkable places that we call home. Here at WWF, every day is World Wildlife Day. We are working hard with ...
WWF and Aviva embarked on an ambitious partnership to restore landscapes and shorelines, build healthier and more resilient communities, inspire and enable public action, and act as joint advocates ...
WWF warns that climate change and nature loss are driving an unprecedented threat to food security Retailers’ progress in reducing environmental risks is stagnating, threatening future commercial ...
In Guaviare, in the Colombian Amazon, birdsong and the creaking of the jungle still dominate the landscape, and the roar of the jaguar endures, a powerful guardian of the biodiverse forest.
WWF is piloting Wholescape in England, Scotland, and Wales. Our innovative approach tackles the nature and climate crises by considering the interconnectedness of natural and human systems. Wholescape ...
Forests, especially in the tropics, are being lost at an alarming rate. In 2024 we lost the equivalent to around 18 football fields a minute. The causes of deforestation are well known – forests are ...
Emperor penguins have an unusual parenting strategy. Unlike other penguin species, they raise their chicks on a floating platform of sea ice connected to the shore, known as fast ice. It’s a ...
In the eastern part of Sabah, Borneo, is the Bukit Piton Forest Reserve. Over decades, orangutans that call this place home have faced a very uncertain future. From the 1980s to 2007, a lot of the ...
India is home to more wild tigers than any other country. Living with one of the world’s most captivating yet powerful carnivores is no easy matter. In countries like the UK, it can be hard to imagine ...
Mountain gorillas have only one home: a network of parks crossing Rwanda, Uganda and the Democratic Republic of the Congo. An estimated 1,063 mountain gorillas are known to remain in the wild today.