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Currently, the law that protects endangered species, the Endangered Species Act (ESA), makes it clear that destroying habitat ...
WWF works to sustain the natural world for the benefit of people and wildlife, collaborating with partners from local to global levels in nearly 100 countries.
Plastic reuse – enabling products or packaging to be used multiple times for their original purpose – .extends the life of ...
WWF-Malaysia’s holistic landscape conservation project in Peninsular Malaysia is dedicated to protecting ...
Companies have an important role to play in land sector mitigation—that is, the reduction of greenhouse gases emitted from ...
When marketing “sustainable” products, accounting techniques sometimes override environmental impacts. For example, “mass ...
WWF works to sustain the natural world for the benefit of people and wildlife, collaborating with partners from local to global levels in nearly 100 countries.
WWF works to sustain the natural world for the benefit of people and wildlife, collaborating with partners from local to global levels in nearly 100 countries.
Among policymakers, practitioners, companies, funders, and investors, nature-based solutions (NbS) and landscape and jurisdictional approaches (LA/JAs) continue to gain prominence as means to halt and ...
WWF works to sustain the natural world for the benefit of people and wildlife, collaborating with partners from local to global levels in nearly 100 countries.
When properly managed, savannas like the Serengeti are capable of capturing at least as much carbon as tropical rainforests.
Shawn Peebles found himself dead broke. He was farming 7,000 acres in Augusta, Arkansas, growing soybeans, rice, and corn ...