Actualités

From safeguarding whales in Chile to tackling illegal fishing in Tanzania – there’s lots of good news to share about our ...
Countries can, and should, exercise legitimate, well-established procedural pathways, including voting on a new treaty text (notably used for the adoption of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights ...
We're tackling the world’s most complex environmental challenges to secure a sustainable future for all life on Earth. As the ...
The International Court of Justice recognised clear obligations of states to avoid impacts of greenhouse gas emissions to the ...
The World's Forgotten Fishes report is a celebration of freshwater fishes – and it’s a call to action too. Rivers, lakes and wetlands are among the most biodiverse places on earth. They cover less ...
History of the Giant Panda 11 March 1869 A hunter brings a panda skin to the French Jesuit, Armand David 13 April 1929 The Roosevelt brothers become the first foreigners to shoot a panda 1936 Ruth ...
Today, WWF France, in partnership with the French multinational AXA insurance, launched a new report, Into the Wild: integrating nature into investment strategies.
WWF’s Reviving the Ocean Economy report clearly spells out what we all stand to lose if the mismanagement of ocean assets continues. Recognizing that science alone is an insufficient motivator, we ...
One Planet CitiesBy 2050, urban populations may double to 6.7 billion from today’s 3.5 billion. Cities generate over 80% of global GDP and are responsible for more than 70 percent of global CO2 ...
Conservation, species survival and trophy huntingWWF opposes any hunting that threatens species survival, and WWF does not support the hunting of an animal solely as a trophy. WWF respects and ...
WWF supports the implementation of urban nature-based solutions for nature and people. Nature must be at the heart of our cities: the places we work, play and engage. Urban nature-based solutions ...
Bamboo contains very little nutritional value so pandas must eat 12-38kg every day to meet their energy needs. But they do branch out, with about 1% of their diet comprising other plants and even meat ...