We work to inspire young people to care about our natural world, help them explore the issues facing our planet, and equip them to take positive action to protect it.
Climate change will mean big changes for animals around the world. So if we care about incredible species, we must care about how a changing climate will make it harder for them to find food, and ...
WWF launches its new Livewell report which looks at what we need to eat between now and 2030 to meet our Paris Agreement commitments. Besides carbon reduction targets, the report includes further ...
Climate change is caused by accumulating greenhouse gases in our atmosphere, resulting in large-scale, long-term shifts in our planet’s weather patterns and an increase in the average temperature ...
To avoid dangerous climate change, global greenhouse gas emissions should peak and then rapidly decline to near zero by the middle of the century. The impacts of climate change are being seen across ...
These great, glorious, fur-coated apes are some of our closest relatives. Sadly we may also be their biggest threat. People have been pushing into the mountain gorilla’s forests in central Africa for ...
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 ...
Peatlands are incredibly special habitats, made up of highly adapted plant species and home to a range of rare and important wildlife. They absorb carbon from the atmosphere and lock it up in peat.
WWF have a series of fun 'make-it' activities that have been designed to encourage wildlife into your local area and explore your love of nature. You can choose to ...
Climate change is making extreme weather, including heatwaves, more frequent and more intense. In the UK we are experiencing more droughts, which contribute to water shortages. As well as helping to ...
Sustainable Futures is a free careers programme for UK secondary schools and colleges that equips young people to thrive in a future green economy, regardless of their career path. Tackling the ...
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 – ...