NEW YORK (23 September 2025): "WWF applauds the Government of Brazil’s US$1 billion investment in the Tropical Forest Forever ...
NEW YORK (19 September 2025): WWF celebrates the latest ratifications of the UN High Seas Treaty, marking a milestone moment ...
For the first time, a comprehensive review of laws in 12 tiger range countries exposes critical gaps in legislation that may ...
WWF welcomes the evolution and improvements in the Concept Note 3.0 of the Tropical Forest Forever Facility (TFFF), which reflects many of the recommendations made by stakeholders during the ...
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 ...
Alarming new data by the Global Forest Watch shows record-breaking tropical forest loss in 2024. It's time to speed up action to safeguard our forests. The latest Global Forest Watch data tells a grim ...
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 ...
17 March 2025 - Ahead of the 30th session of the International Seabed Authority (ISA) March Council meeting, WWF is urging governments to pause deep seabed mining due to its severe risks to marine ...
Jueves 14 noviembre- COP29. Brasil se convirtió en el segundo país signatario del Acuerdo de París en presentar su nueva Contribución Determinada a Nivel Nacional (NDC por su sigla en inglés), que es ...
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 have come together to evaluate whether enough ...
WWF calls on G20 for international financial reforms in new Global Roadmap for a Nature-Positive Economy WWF publishes a Global Roadmap for a Nature-Positive Economy calling for reform of global ...
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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