News

Our third feature takes us to the Iberian Peninsula, where unique forest landscapes and the wildlife they support are ...
Farmers in Pakistan's provinces of Punjab and Sindh are embracing new techniques delivered by WWF and IKEA mobile training, ...
Bonn, Germany (12 June 2025) – As delegates convene in Bonn for the UN Climate Change Conference, WWF is calling on negotiators to lay the groundwork for COP30 in Belém, Brazil, to become a defining ...
Marine turtles often swim across the borders of several countries and through international waters, while facing multiple threats such as bycatch, poaching and climate change. As a keystone species, ...
From new marine protections to progress on the High Seas Treaty, this conference has delivered vital new momentum for ocean conservation. But unless we tackle the climate crisis head-on and move ...
Sharks and rays (which are closely related) are among the most severely impacted species within the ocean’s accelerating ecological crisis. More than 35% are now threatened with extinction, largely ...
WWF pushed for urgent and ambitious action at COP16 Governments of 196 countries have been meeting at the UN COP16 biodiversity conference in Cali, Colombia, for two weeks. This is the first time they ...
More than 145 million tonnes of sugar (sucrose) is produced per year in about 120 countries; open pan (artisanal) sugar production in Asia probably adds more than ten million tonnes to this total.
In a major boost to global efforts to mitigate climate change and adapt its worsening impacts on societies and economies, 37 countries today joined the Freshwater Challenge - the world’s largest ...
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 ...
Report reveals a ‘system in peril’ as the world approaches dangerous, irreversible tipping points driven by nature loss and climate change. Steepest declines in monitored wildlife populations recorded ...