Working to sustain the natural world for the benefit of people and nature ...
By Gregg Yan Locusts of the sea, they come by the thousands – and leave behind a watery graveyard of coral skeletons. An enormous wave of coral-eating crown-of-thorns starfish (Acanthaster planci) is ...
Stilted homes in Andavoanemboka village, Madagascar, where female solar technicians have brought solar-powered light. © Bella Roscher / WWF-CH. In the stilted homes of Madagascar ...
A new MSCI case study in a series to be released over time on nature-related risk data, demonstrates the capabilities of newly developed, geospatially aggregated MSCI Biodiversity Risk Metrics which ...
January 2026 began with water everywhere. Across southern Africa, Europe and parts of North Africa, rivers burst their banks.
Why is no one speaking openly about the climate crisis threatening the Winter Olympics? asks Mariagrazia Midulla, WWF Italy’s Climate and Energy Head. The 2026 Winter Olympics, which kicked off this ...
IUCN Red List highlights success for green turtles but mounting pressure on Arctic seals and birds worldwide GLAND, Switzerland (10 October 2025): WWF welcomes the reclassification of green sea ...
As temperatures rise, reindeer face a growing struggle to reach the lichen they depend on. More frequent and intense droughts, storms and heat waves, melting glaciers, warming oceans and rising sea ...
Despite a glut of commitments in recent years, finance for conserving the world’s forests for people and nature remains woefully inadequate. An estimated US$460 billion a year will be needed to ...
More frequent and intense droughts, storms and heat waves, melting glaciers, warming oceans and rising sea levels – climate change is already causing immense harm to the natural world, putting ...
Water pollution is top environmental issue in survey of 30,000 people across 31 countries and territories by Globescan and WWF With the world facing a worsening water crisis, a huge public survey ...
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 ...
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