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From safeguarding whales in Chile to tackling illegal fishing in Tanzania – there’s lots of good news to share about our ...
The International Court of Justice recognised clear obligations of states to avoid impacts of greenhouse gas emissions to the ...
We're tackling the world’s most complex environmental challenges to secure a sustainable future for all life on Earth. As the ...
WWF works with companies through strategic corporate partnerships opportunities to drive business transformation that ...
Highest standards on integrity and good conduct: We collaborate with partners that are committed to achieving and upholding ...
Conservation, species survival and trophy huntingWWF opposes any hunting that threatens species survival, and WWF does not support the hunting of an animal solely as a trophy. WWF respects and ...
The greater one-horned rhino is a conservation success, with numbers increasing significantly since 1975. Back then there were only 600 rhinos left in the wild. After decades of successful efforts, ...
Dolphins are important indicators for the health of the rivers they live in, which are also the lifeblood of huge economies and hundreds of millions of people. WE DEPEND ON RIVER DOLPHINS Where ...
The Freshwater Challenge aims to ensure 300,000km of degraded rivers and 350 million hectares of degraded wetlands are committed to restoration by 2030, and to protect freshwater ecosystems. In a ...
In 2019, WWF commissioned an independent panel of experts to review how we were responding to reports of human rights abuses by some government rangers in complex and remote landscapes in Central ...
The World's Forgotten Fishes report is a celebration of freshwater fishes – and it’s a call to action too. Rivers, lakes and wetlands are among the most biodiverse places on earth. They cover less ...
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 ...