More Related Content Similar to Conservation Highlights May 2014 edition - PowerPoint Presentation (20) Conservation Highlights May 2014 edition - PowerPoint Presentation1. Recent achievements and challenges in WWF’s work to protect
biodiversity and reduce humanity’s footprint in priority areas of
the global conservation programme
Conservation Highlights
May 2014
2. Since its launch in 2007, WWF’s Earth Hour has become the
world’s largest mass participation environmental initiative, active
in over 160 countries, and is becoming a platform where people
are mobilising action on climate and other global, regional and
local environmental priorities.
EARTH HOUR
Conservation Highlights, May 2014
3. Earth Hour 2014 set new records for
global participation in March, with 162
countries and 7,000 cities celebrating the
event. New crowdsourcing and
crowdfunding initiatives enable people to
use their voices or their money to support
WWF conservation actions. © Getty Images
Conservation Highlights, May 2014
Earth Hour 2014 event
4. WWF’s Earth Hour City Challenge
recognized Cape Town as the Global
Earth Hour Capital 2014. The South
African city took bold steps to move away
from fossil fuels to renewable energy. The
competition attracted 160 cities from 14
countries to promote low carbon
development and combat climate change.
© We love cities
Conservation Highlights, May 2014
Cape Town awarded Earth Hour Capital 2014
5. The idea of mobilizing the voices of the Earth Hour audience in
support of environmental actions around the globe took off with
Earth Hour 2014:
In China, Earth Hour took the theme “Blue Sky” on the need to stop
pollution and smog, using a photo-based phone app
• The #maketheswitch Earth Hour message in the UAE reached more
than 5 million people, urging a switch to energy efficient lighting
• For the 3rd year running, more than 100,000 Earth Hour fans in
Russia joined an environmental petition, this time calling for increased
protection for 5 threatened species including the Far Eastern leopard
Conservation Highlights, May 2014
Earth Hour 2014 launches crowdsourcing 1/2
6. •Over 2,000 energy-efficient stoves were distributed in Madagascar, to
reduce pressure on forests, and crowdfunding on the Earth Hour site raised
funds for a further 500 stoves
• In Finland, 20,000 people called for a fair subsidy policy for solar power.
Helping drive the pledge #EarthHourSuomi was the most tweeted hashtag in
the country
• 12,000 signatures on a petition against the proposed Ptolemaida V coal-
fired power station in Greece will go to the government and KfW, the finance
bank and sole investor
Conservation Highlights, May 2014
Earth Hour 2014 launches crowdsourcing 2/2
7. WWF has run many campaigns to focus attention on key issues
and solutions. Current global campaigns include a call to shift
investments away from fossil fuels to renewable energy sources,
and an emergency campaign to address the threat of oil drilling in
Africa’s prized Virunga National Park in the Democratic Republic
of Congo.
GLOBAL CAMPAIGNS
Conservation Highlights, May 2014
8. WWF is campaigning to save Virunga – Africa’s oldest national
park and most biodiverse protected area – from oil drilling. Virunga
is also a vital resource for local communities, supporting tens of
thousands of people. But this iconic place is under threat from
irresponsible oil exploration. Some lines should not be crossed,
and drilling for oil in Virunga is one of these.
VIRUNGA
Conservation Highlights, May 2014
9. Allegations of human rights violations and
breaching of environmental protection by UK oil
exploration company Soco International PLC
relating to its work in Virunga, are being
investigated by an Organisation for Economic
Cooperation and Development (OECD) agency.
Announced in February, this follows a complaint
from WWF that Soco has breached OECD
global corporate responsibility standards.
OECD investigation of Soco
Conservation Highlights, May 2014
© Brent Stirton / Reportage by Getty / WWF-Canon
10. Protests against Soco’s plans to start seismic
testing for oil in Virunga voiced community
concerns this will damage or destroy their
livelihoods, and could reignite civil conflict.
More than 675,000 people have joined WWF’s
petition to demand that Virunga be protected
from the damaging impacts of oil.
Opposition increases to Soco’s oil plans
Conservation Highlights, May 2014
© Edgar Mbekemoja
11. French oil giant Total has confirmed it will
not explore for oil and gas in World
Heritage Sites (WHS). This was
announced in February by the United
Nations agency in charge of WHS. Total’s
decision follows an earlier pledge to
remain out of Virunga.
World Heritage Sites now ‘no-go’ for Total
Conservation Highlights, May 2014
© Brent Stirton / Reportage by Getty Images / WWF-Canon
12. UK oil company Soco International PLC
announced in June it will end its operations in
Africa’s oldest national park and has committed
to remain out of all other UNESCO World
Heritage Sites. “Today is a victory for our planet
and for good practices in business. This
success is the work of government officials,
activists within DRC and supporters worldwide
who joined together to help remove the most
immediate threat to Virunga,” said Marco
Lambertini, Director General of WWF
International.
BREAKING NEWS: Soco agrees to pull out of Virunga!
Conservation Highlights, May 2014
© Brent Stirton / Reportage by Getty / WWF-Canon
13. WWF’s Seize Your Power campaign to promote clean, renewable
energy aims to mobilize key organisations investing in new energy
sources to shift US$40 billion away from fossil fuels into clean
renewable energy sources. This shift is crucial to rapidly move the
world towards climate-safe energy.
Seize Your Power
Conservation Highlights, May 2014
14. WWF welcomed the decision by the
European Bank for Reconstruction and
Development (EBRD) to phase out
funding of coal-fired power stations, but
called for effective implementation.
EBRD is the third major development
finance body to move away from coal-
based energy projects.
EBRD commits to step out of coal
Conservation Highlights, May 2014
© WWF-Canon / Mauri RAUTKARI
15. A major UN report calls for a more than
tripling of investments in clean energy
solutions as the main measure to
mitigate climate change. The April report,
agreed by the IPCC, finds that
investment in clean energy sources will
have limited economic impact compared
to the very significant costs of inaction.
Action to counter climate change must happen now
Conservation Highlights, May 2014
© Kevin Schafer / WWF-Canon
16. WWF’s regional campaigns range from action on threatened
species such as tigers and sharks, to specific challenges against
environmentally-damaging development schemes such as dams.
REGIONAL CAMPAIGNS
Conservation Highlights, May 2014
17. As apex predators, sharks are crucially important to the health of
the world’s oceans, but are being wiped out on a massive scale –
an estimated 100 million killed annually, mostly for shark fin soup,
an Asian delicacy. Sharks also breed slowly. WWF offices in the
Asia-Pacific region are campaigning to get their countries to stop
importing, selling and consuming shark fin.
SHARKS
Conservation Highlights, May 2014
18. Key shark fin importing hubs, Hong Kong
and Singapore, report reduced demand for
shark fin following campaigns against
unsustainable shark killing. HK reported a
one-third drop in shark fin imports in 2013
compared to 2012. In Singapore shark fin
sales to hotels and restaurants also fell by
one-third, and prices fell similarly.
Progress on addressing the shark slaughter
Conservation Highlights, May 2014
© NC Turner / WWF-Canon
19. The Leonardo DiCaprio Foundation has
donated $3 million for WWF to help double
Nepal’s tiger population by 2022. WWF’s
work with local agencies and communities
has helped one tiger population almost triple
to 50 tigers. Habitat destruction and
poaching are the key threats to the 3,200
remaining wild tigers.
DiCaprio funds help Nepal’s tiger numbers double
Conservation Highlights, May 2014
© Tom Munro/JBG Photo
20. WWF has a strong and successful track record of challenging
development projects that will cause environmental and social
damage. Current campaigns are running against ill-planned
projects such as ports, roads and dams in conservation priority
areas such as the Amazon, Mekong and Danube as well as World
Heritage Sites such as the Great Barrier Reef and Doñana.
CHALLENGING DAMAGING
DEVELOPMENT
Conservation Highlights, May 2014
21. A declaration opposing construction of the
Xayaburi Dam in Laos on the main Mekong
River has been issued by a consortium
representing 39 NGOs and civil society
groups including WWF. The dam threatens
the huge Mekong fishing industry which
supports 60 million people in the region with
food and livelihoods.
Dam threatens food security in the Mekong
Conservation Highlights, May 2014
© WWF-Greater Mekong
22. WWF has joined a legal challenge launched
in Australia to stop the dumping in the Great
Barrier Reef (GBR) of 3mill m3 of material
excavated for development of a megaport
for coal exports. The dumping is also
opposed by tourism operators: tourism in
the GBR generates $5 billion annually.
Development threats to Australia’s Great Barrier Reef
Conservation Highlights, May 2014
© WWF-Canon / Martin HARVEY
23. Croatia has stopped a proposed scheme that
would have canalized a 53 km section of the
Danube River along the Croatia-Serbia border,
and destroyed key natural sites including a
renowned bird paradise.
Victories in Europe against destructive development 1:
Danube
Conservation Highlights, May 2014
© WWF-Canon / Anton VORAUER
24. A WWF campaign against construction of small
hydropower in high conservation value rivers in
Rumania has gained success with a
government commitment to develop a
hydropower policy in line with EU standards.
Victories in Europe against destructive development 2:
Rumania
Conservation Highlights, May 2014
© WWF-România
25. A 22-year battle to save the Acheloos River in
Greece from a massive water diversion
scheme has been won with a decision by the
country’s supreme administrative court
upholding the objections of WWF and a
coalition of NGOs and municipal authorities
against the diversion.
Victories in Europe against destructive development 3:
Greece
Conservation Highlights, May 2014
© Nikoç Metpou
26. Spain’s Coto Doñana is one of Europe’s
most valuable wetlands, sanctuary for
millions of migratory birds. Purchase of the
land in 1963 started WWF on the path to
protect thousands of priority places and
species worldwide. In this 50th anniversary
of Doñana’s creation, WWF remains
committed to ensure Doñana remains a vital
stopover for migratory birds.
Doñana at 50 – a paradise still threatened
Conservation Highlights, May 2014
© Jorge Sierra / WWF-Spain
27. WWF’s biodiversity meta-goal is to ensure the integrity of the most
outstanding natural places on Earth. This includes the protection of
biodiversity in high conservation priority areas, and restoring
populations of those species with the highest ecological, economic
and cultural value.
BIODIVERSITY
Conservation Highlights, May 2014
28. WWF recognised Namibia’s communal
conservancy programme as a Gift to the
Earth. Wildlife & habitat have recovered
and rural communities gain by managing
their own environment. The 79
conservancies cover 16 million hectares,
help bring half of Namibia under
conservation management and involve 1
in 10 Namibians.
WWF recognises community conservation in Namibia
Conservation Highlights, May 2014
© John E. Newby / WWF-Canon
29. The 3 countries sheltering mountain
gorillas, Democratic Republic of Congo,
Rwanda and Uganda, agreed to protect
gorilla habitat spanning their shared
borders and maximise the value of
tourism for local communities. Gorilla-
based tourism brings income to local
communities, whose support is essential
to protect the gorillas.
Community support vital to secure endangered species 1:
Mountain gorillas
Conservation Highlights, May 2014
© WWF-Canon / Martin HARVEY
30. Anti-poaching action helped more than
triple Saiga antelope populations in
Mongolia from 3,000 in 1998 to 10,000 in
2013, and the species has expanded into
regions where it was wiped out decades
ago.
Community support vital to secure endangered species 2:
Saiga antelope
Conservation Highlights, May 2014
© Wild Wonders / Igor Shpilenhok / WWF
31. Eight south-east Europe countries, from
Albania in the south to Slovenia in the
north, have agreed regional cooperation
on conservation and to increase
protected area by 13% including two new
national parks. Conservation goals will be
included in national development plans
and nature-based tourism promoted.
Regional conservation agreed in south-east Europe
Conservation Highlights, May 2014
© Wild Wonders / Ruben Smit / WWF
32. The five countries host to polar bear
populations committed to ensure the
future of this species as climate change
hugely threatens its ice habitat. At a high
level forum in Moscow in December,
Canada, Denmark, Norway, Russia and
US agreed to implement a circumpolar
action plan for polar bear conservation.
Regional conservation agreed in Europe and Arctic
Conservation Highlights, May 2014
© WWF / David Jenkins
33. Forty-six countries committed to “decisive
and urgent action” at the London
Conference on Illegal Wildlife Trade in
February with stronger enforcement,
reduced consumer demand and
sustainable livelihoods for communities
living alongside wildlife. Poaching
threatens wildlife, rangers and civil
society by promoting criminality.
Governments commit to action on poaching crisis
Conservation Highlights, May 2014
© James Morgan / WWF-Canon
34. Poachers killed 1004 rhinos in South
Africa in 2013 -- a sharp increase from
668 lost in 2012. Recent conservation
success in rebuilding rhino numbers is
now at risk. South Africa, home to about
80% of Africa’s rhinos, is working with
key countries including Viet Nam to
counter the illegal trade, through tougher
sentences and reduced demand.
Slaughter of SA rhino continues
Conservation Highlights, May 2014
© WWF-Canon / Martin HARVEY
35. WWF honoured the work of 9
organizations in Nepal with Leaders for a
Living Planet awards for having achieved
zero poaching of elephant, rhino and
tiger for a second 12 month period. The
organizations, including protected area
agencies, military and police units, show
poaching can be stopped, wildlife crime
curbed, and tourism can benefit.
Nepal celebrates a year of zero poaching
Conservation Highlights, May 2014
© Akash Shrestha / WWF Nepal
36. WWF has been active in Latin America and the Caribbean since its
creation, as this region hosts tremendous biodiversity riches
including the world's largest tropical rainforest, the Amazon. To
mark the holding of WWF's 2014 Annual Conference in Brazil, a
selection of conservation highlights from the region is presented.
FOCUS ON WWF IN LATIN AMERICA &
CARIBBEAN
Conservation Highlights, May 2014
37. Bolivia has committed to wisely manage the
6.9 million-hectare Llanos de Moxos
wetland, headwaters for the priority Madeira
River – major southern tributary of the
Amazon River. WWF recognized this
globally significant action as a Gift to the
Earth. Bolivia leads the world with almost 15
mill ha of wetlands designated under the
Ramsar Convention.
Bolivia takes leadership on freshwater conservation
Conservation Highlights, May 2014
© WWF-Bolivia / Omar Rocha
38. For four consecutive years, numbers of
migratory gray whales are up in the main
coastal lagoons of Mexico’s Baja California.
Researchers in one lagoon counted 2017
individuals in February compared to 1178 in
2013 – a 44% increase. Gray whales
congregate in the lagoons during the winter
breeding season.
Increased sightings of gray whales in Mexico
Conservation Highlights, May 2014
© WWF-Canon / Michel Terrettaz
39. Successes of WWF’s five year partnership
with the Carlos Slim Foundation include
300,000 ha of protected areas, better
management of a further million ha, and
reduced logging in the core zone of the
monarch butterfly reserve. WWF seeks to
protect the butterfly migration route across
North America – a major natural wonder.
Protection of monarch butterfly habitat in Mexico
Conservation Highlights, May 2014
© WWF-Canon / Kevin Schafer
40. Creation by Chile of a new marine protected
area (MPA) helps secure a local blue whale
population – the largest mammal on Earth –
following 15 years of effort by WWF and
other organizations to protect the area from
salmon farming and damaging
development. The MPA is a vital feeding
and nursery area for blue whales and
several other cetacean species.
.
Chile acts on blue whale conservation
Conservation Highlights, May 2014
© Naturepl.com / David Fleetham / WWF
41. Colombia has created a new coastal
protected area to secure important nesting
beaches for endangered leatherback and
hawksbill turtles, in collaboration with local
community councils
Marine conservation in Colombia
Conservation Highlights, May 2014
© Nils Aukan / WWF-Canon
42. Almost one-third of the world’s beef is
produced in Latin America and demand for
beef drives forest loss in many of WWF’s
priority areas. WWF seeks implementation
of the Global Roundtable on Sustainable
Beef principles to achieve less damaging
cattle ranching practices through improved
land-use and consumer demand.
Towards sustainable beef production in Latin America
Conservation Highlights, May 2014
© Adriano Gambarini/ WWF-Brazil
43. After several years of declining
deforestation rates, Brazil’s annual
deforestation rate has risen 28 percent.
Forests are cleared for reasons including
illegal mining and soy production. The Brazil
Government stated its commitment to
reverse increased deforestation and
eliminate illegal logging in the Amazon.
Deforestation rates in Brazil surge
Conservation Highlights, May 2014
© Brent Stirton / Getty images / WWF
44. Deforestation of the WWF priority Atlantic
Forest in Argentina’s Misiones Province has
decreased by 70% since new regulations in
2010 to stop rampant forest clearance. The
landuse law forbids clear-cutting and
imposes other restrictions in the remaining
forest, reducing annual forest loss from
18,000 ha to 5,300 ha.
Drop in deforestation in Argentina’s Atlantic Forest
Conservation Highlights, May 2014
© WWF-Canon / Michel Gunther
45. WWF’s second meta-goal is to reduce humankind’s Ecological
Footprint so that we live within the renewable resource limits of our
planet. This builds on strong foundations and targets humanity’s
carbon, commodity and water footprints which have the greatest
impact on biodiversity.
FOOTPRINT
Conservation Highlights, May 2014
46. WWF is partnering with global fashion
company H&M and the Mondi Group,
one of the world’s largest pulp and
paper producers, to implement water
stewardship and support wise water
management in priority river basins.
WWF develops key water stewardship partnerships
Conservation Highlights, May 2014
© WWF
47. The European Parliament voted in
October for measures to support
sustainable fishing and against
destructive practices along lines
proposed by WWF.
A WWF pilot project shows satellite
surveillance of fishing activities can
promote legal and transparent fishing
operations – especially to counter
illegal, unreported and unregulated
(IUU) fishing.
Progress towards sustainable fisheries
Conservation Highlights, May 2014
© Mike R. Jackson / WWF-Canon
48. Twenty-five of the world’s major pulp and
paper manufacturers, with a combined
annual output of 85 million tonnes, joined
the WWF Environmental Paper Company
Index 2013 and disclosed the footprints of
40 product categories, reporting on targets
and performance. This industry is key to
conserving forests.
Leading paper companies embrace transparency
Conservation Highlights, May 2014
© Edward Parker / WWF-Canon
49. Atlantic salmon from Norway certified by the
Aquaculture Stewardship Council (ASC) is
now available for consumers in Japan, a
major seafood consumer. Farmed fish now
makes up half of all seafood and demand is
growing. ASC sets robust standards to
minimise impacts on local communities and
environments
ASC salmon available in key Japanese market
Conservation Highlights, May 2014
© WWF-Canon / Jo BENN
50. WWF calls for continued pressure on
Indonesia’s pulp and paper industry to
ensure recent commitments on
responsible forest management and
reduced deforestation are implemented.
Companies such as APRIL and APP can
restore critical forest and wetland areas,
reduce climate emissions, and
compensate affected communities.
Indonesian paper companies turning over a new leaf?
Conservation Highlights, May 2014
© Eyes on the Forest
51. Since 1994, the Forest Stewardship
Council (FSC) has certified 180 million ha
of forest across 81 countries worldwide as
sustainably managed. WWF helped create
the FSC to mobilize market forces,
including consumer choice, in support of
responsible forest management that
delivers social and environmental benefits
The Forest Stewardship Council (FSC) is 20 years old
Conservation Highlights, May 2014
© N.C. Turner / WWF-Canon
52. The climate crisis is perhaps the ultimate test of WWF’s ability to
harness its strengths to leverage political commitment at the scale
required by an issue that threatens the world as we know it.
CLIMATE
Conservation Highlights, May 2014
53. WWF has recognised as a Gift to the
Earth Denmark’s inspiring leadership
and example addressing climate change
with its highly ambitious commitments to
reduce carbon emissions, phase out
fossil fuels, and switch to renewable
energy. Denmark has committed to
achieve 100% clean renewable energy
by 2050 with coal phased out by 2030.
Denmark recognised for climate leadership
Conservation Highlights, May 2014
© National Geographic Stock/Sarah Leen/WWF
54. World leaders agreed a finance package
to provide funds for tropical forest
nations which are reducing CO2
emissions from deforestation and forest
degradation (REDD+). This addresses
the 20% of global emissions caused by
forest loss and is a major victory for the
world’s tropical forests, forest
communities and our climate.
World leaders agree key mechanism to stop
deforestation
Conservation Highlights, May 2014
© Brent Stirton / Getty Images
55. A UN climate impact report prepared by
the world’s leading scientific authorities in
the IPCC shows climate change is is
affecting the lives of people worldwide
and the ecosystems sustaining life. The
report sets a stark choice: cut emissions
and face challenging and barely
manageable risks - or do nothing and face
a world of devastating risks and impacts.
IPCC report details clear evidence of climate change
Conservation Highlights, May 2014
© Juan Carlos Del Olmo / WWF
56. Perhaps WWF’s greatest strength is its people - the staff and
officers who together with our partners strive for a living planet.
And there are many leaders and champions playing key roles
outside WWF to achieve conservation success and sustainable
development. By highlighting these environmental champions
WWF recognises their contribution, profiles conservation success
and inspires others to take up the challenge to secure a living
planet.
PEOPLE
Conservation Highlights, May 2014
57. Paul Polman, CEO of global consumer
group Unilever, has been recognised by
WWF for his global leadership in making
sustainability a key issue within the
global retail sector with the 2013 WWF
Duke of Edinburgh Conservation Medal.
Polman led the drive to reduce Unilever’s
environmental impact.
Unilever CEO awarded top WWF honour
Conservation Highlights, May 2014
© WWF / Jay Louvion Studio Casagrande
58. Nina Jensen, CEO of WWF- Norway has
been recognised as one of 200 young
global leaders 2014 by the World
Economic Forum for her community
involvement and inspired leadership.
WWF paid tribute to former South African
President Nelson Mandela who died in
December. Mandela received WWF’s Gift
to the Earth award in 1998 for creation of
Table Mountain National Park.
Inspirational environmental leaders recognised
Conservation Highlights, May 2014
© Getty Images
59. WWF announced the appointment of Dr
Marco Lambertini as Director General of
WWF International. With 25 years of
global conservation leadership, Marco
began as a WWF youth volunteer in Italy.
Marco officiated at the opening in March
of the new WWF-Korea office which will
focus on footprint issues such as climate
change, and sustainable fisheries.
New Director-General for WWF International
Conservation Highlights, May 2014
© Gemma Parkes / WWF