Just 20 minutes in nature a day can help reduce stress levels, ease anxiety and boost our mood. It’s time to get your daily dose of nature. There are many ways to help protect and restore nature that ...
Nature is vital. It provides our life-support system. But our one shared home is under threat like never before. So at WWF Cymru, we’re fighting to restore habitats and species and to build a Wales ...
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 ...
The Adélie is the littlest, and also the most widespread, species of penguin in the Antarctic. They might look a bit clumsy on land, but penguins are brilliant swimmers. They can dive down to 180m – ...
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 ...
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 ...
Almost 90% of wild plants and 75% of leading global crops depend on animal pollination. One out of every three mouthfuls of our food depends on pollinators such as bees. Crops that depend on ...
We’ve seen fires devastating precious places like the Amazon rainforest. But what are the facts and what are the myths about the destruction of our forests? We’re here to help. While growing demand ...
The UK is one of the countries most responsible for climate change. This is because it has emitted so much greenhouse gas since the start of the Industrial Revolution, and these historical emissions ...
Today we face the double, interlinked emergencies of human-induced climate change and the loss of biodiversity, threatening the well-being of current and future generations. As our future is ...