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 threatened by increasingly ferocious wildfires.
Improving forest management: ‘Forest management’ participants – including timber producers in the Congo Basin, Interholco and CBG, and agroforestry organizations in the Peruvian Amazon, including ...
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.
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 ...
Report reveals a ‘system in peril’ as the world approaches dangerous, irreversible tipping points driven by nature loss and climate change.
Large, threatened mammals such as great apes and forest elephants and other wildlife are better conserved in FSC-certified forests compared to non-certified.
The World Trade Organization’s 13th Ministerial Conference concluded after a week of negotiations between its 166 members in the United Arab Emirates with no major agreement on harmful fisheries ...
WWF´s Greening Financial Regulation Initiative (GFRi) has today published findings from its annual SUSREG Tracker. The assessment shows that whilst significant progress has been made by several ...
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 ...
A first-of-its kind report from WWF and the Boston Consulting Group (BCG) shows the potential risks and benefits of a rapid shift to renewable energy for people and nature.