News

WWF Welcomes the “Compromiso de Sevilla” as step forward for sustainable finance but without nature, the UN Sustainable Development Goals cannot be achieved.
WWF says slow progress in mid-year negotiations threatens success at COP30 in Brazil later this year BONN, Germany (Thursday 26 June 2025): Hopes for a strong foundation for COP30 were dashed when the ...
Our third feature takes us to the Iberian Peninsula, where unique forest landscapes and the wildlife they support are ...
Improving forest management: ‘Forest management’ participants – including timber producers in the Congo Basin, Interholco and CBG, and agroforestry organizations in the Peruvian Amazon, including ...
By Fran Price, Lead, WWF Forest Practice The latest Global Forest Watch data tells a grim but familiar story: the world is failing forests. Despite the vital role of forests for climate stability, ...
We are looking for a full time (Senior) Policy Officer, Sustainable Agriculture & Food to join our natural resources team. The ideal candidate should have experience in the field of land-use, ...
With the world facing a worsening water crisis, a huge public survey found that water pollution is the number one environmental issue for people globally, topping even climate change, and that there ...
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 ...
WWF publishes a Global Roadmap for a Nature-Positive Economy calling for reform of global financial and economic 'rules of the game’ to reverse nature loss Mounting evidence shows that the destruction ...
WWF´s Sustainable Financial Regulations and Central Bank Activities (SUSREG) Tracker 2024 finds that banking and insurance supervision on climate-related issues have been steadily progressing over the ...
Steepest declines in monitored wildlife populations recorded in Latin America and the Caribbean (-95%), Africa (-76%) and Asia–Pacific (-60%) WWF: What happens over the next five years will be crucial ...
Governments annually spend an estimated US$470 billion on agricultural subsidies that harm forests and other natural ecosystems, and contribute to biodiversity loss. These kinds of subsidies often ...