Climate change will mean big changes for animals around the world. So if we care about incredible species, we must care about how a changing climate will make it harder for them to find food, and ...
A health-check for the planet – the report includes the Living Planet Index, which tracks how species populations have fared around the world over a 50-year period. Together with other indicators, the ...
This festive season, give someone a WWF adoption to help protect and restore iconic wildlife and their precious habitats. We’re WWF, the leading global environmental charity, and we’re bringing our ...
The Seafood Jurisdictional Initiative was previously known as the Seascape Approach. It aims to promote the health of the oceans and the safeguarding of people in seafood production. It plans to do ...
Thank you! Over 10,000 of you wrote to your MP last year calling for the current UK government to keep the crucial promises they’ve made to tackle the nature and ...
Emission reporting is a key action for any businesses who want to better understand their impact, and to make real changes for the environment. With this guide, WWF aim to help businesses like yours ...
With a new UK Government in place, this is a crucial time for us to make it clear that action on nature and climate is a priority for people all over the UK. In this special episode of Call of the ...
Thanks to WWF and our partners, schools were a key part of the story of COP26. Throughout COP26, hundreds of schools across the UK took part in creating a Forest of Promises, creating leaves with ...
Set your heating thermostat 1°C lower than usual for a week and see if you notice the difference. Turning down the thermostat means less energy is required to heat your home to higher temperatures.
Our planet is being pushed to its limits. We are consuming resources at a rate that is unsustainable, and this is leading to effects such as climate change, pollution, and the loss of wildlife and ...
We all have a part to play in the recovery of the natural world, but more often than not, it feels like an increasingly impossible task. The good news is that WWF Ambassador Sir David Attenborough ...