A MESSAGE FROM OUR CHIEF EXECUTIVE This year has been difficult for all of us. The coronavirus outbreak has put enormous pressure on individuals, families and communities trying to cope with ordinary life under extraordinary circumstances. The pandemic, particularly how it started and spread so quickly, is one of the harshest reminders of the impacts humankind has on the balance of nature. During lockdown, the growing assumption was that the restrictions were benefiting our climate and our natural world. But science tells us any short-term gains are set against a background of steep long-term decline. A rise in illegal wildlife poaching and the horrific fires in the Amazon and Australia were a brutal contrast to images of cleaner rivers and coastlines in the UK. Our own report, Covid-19: urgent call to protect people and nature, published in June, clearly showed the drivers behind zoonotic diseases are down to the way we live: from trade and consumption to deforestation and food production. The pandemic has had an impact on our work across the world, as we have had to pause some programmes or scale them back to ensure the safety and wellbeing of colleagues and the people we work with. However, we have seen incredible examples of compassion as people have pulled together to protect and restore nature, particularly our work in Brazil, Bolivia, Kenya and Tanzania where we’ve even supplied much-needed personal protective equipment. Here in the UK we have also adapted so we can continue to deliver on our vision that by 2030 nature’s vital signs are improving. I am extremely proud of how staff at WWF have responded to the demands of the coronavirus, especially as some colleagues lost loved ones and others became primary carers. I’d like to thank all my colleagues in England, Scotland and Wales for being so flexible and giving such friendship and support.
Against the backdrop of such change we are adapting our strategy. While our vision remains unchanged, we are adjusting our planned goals and investments. The past year has cemented our belief that we need to set nature on a path to recovery, with changes from the way we produce and consume food to the growing levels of emissions in our atmosphere. It is only by doing this that we can hope to save our world. At the heart of this change is WWF’s Living Planet Report 2020, which highlighted the devastation we are causing to our planet, as it showed wildlife population sizes are in freefall – plummeting by 68% since 1970. And the downward trend isn’t slowing. The report starkly spells out the issue, but month after month we’ve seen the reality play out across the media via harrowing reports, often highlighted by our own evidence. We’ve seen images of record losses of ice in both polar regions; and ITV reported from Colombia on our Below The Canopy report which showed forest mammals, birds, reptiles and amphibians have declined by more than 50% since 1970 owing to deforestation. These are ‘tipping points’ for our planet and will bring irreversible damage to our biosphere and the lives of billions of people unless we act now. And WWF is acting. We know we’re on a long journey to put back what the world has taken from precious wetlands, oceans and forests by 2030 – but it’s an urgent one where we are making progress. Our achievements this past year, both via our cutting-edge practical projects and through advocacy and campaigning, are set out on pages 18-29. Against a testing backdrop we’ve made a real difference, including: equipping firefighters in the Amazon; helping mountain gorilla numbers to rise in central Africa; and securing the toughest climate laws in the world in Scotland.
I’d also like to offer sincere thanks to the huge numbers of supporters who have given so generously to us this year helping fund our work on the ground, power our campaigns and elevate our mission. Your support provides the lifeblood of WWF.
The fires in Australia saw more than three billion animals affected as areas equivalent to 40% of the UK burned. I thank everyone who contributed £3 million to our appeal, which has helped to provide emergency care for injured wildlife and restore 10,000 koala habitat trees, and continues to support the bushfire response.
This year, like all of us I was deeply affected by issues raised by the Black Lives Matter movement. Racism has no place at WWF – we celebrate and respect diversity among the people, partners and communities with whom we work. In response to the Black Lives Matter movement I implemented a new Positive Change Agenda to take stock of where we are as an organisation in relation to equality and inclusion and to propose next steps closely aligned with our mission to make changes for the better.
Our advocacy is also central to securing global commitments and leadership that will ultimately lead to a restoration of nature. Despite COP26 and G7 being postponed this year, there have been major breakthroughs. Heads of state and governments from 64 countries committed to reverse nature loss by the end of the decade by signing a UN Leaders’ Pledge for Nature, which is extremely encouraging. But we need firm and resourced action plans.
12 TRUSTEES’ REPORT