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NASA Sea Ice Video

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Credit: NASA/Goddard Space Flight Center Scientific Visualization Studio The Next Generation Blue Marble data is courtesy of Reto Stockli (NASA/GSFC).

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Climate

How businesses can impact climate change

Carbon dioxide (CO2) is the most significant of the greenhouse gases, accounting for over 80 percent of global warming pollution. Atmospheric levels of CO2 are now higher than at any time in the past 420,000 years. And the changes we are witnessing - and those that are predicted - are largely due to human behavior.

Around 97 percent of the CO2 emitted by western industrialized countries comes from burning coal, oil and gas for energy. We spew approximately 25 billion metric tons of CO2 into the atmosphere every year. That's about 800 metric tons every second. Not surprisingly, a global temperature build-up on this scale is seriously disrupting the natural balance of the world's climate.

Black Noddy (Anous minutus) taking off at sunset. Sea birds' colony. New Caledonia, France
© WWF-Canon / Roger LeGUEN

It is not what you think, but how you think
Businesses must play a vital role in reducing the impacts of climate change. They can do this by implementing technologies that reduce CO2 emissions.  The link between sound environmental practices and profitable, long-term business sustainability makes it increasingly important for businesses to make better use of resources and create more energy-efficient products. Already, risks associated with environmental issues are considered right along-side other factors that impact a company’s performance and value.

Moving towards a sustainable future
WWF partners with companies to help them achieve their environmental objectives. With our global reach, scientific expertise and in-depth knowledge across a full spectrum of environmental issues, we are positioned to assist companies interested in reducing their environmental footprint. We offer comprehensive assessment and measurement tools to identify key issues, develop best practices, set effective benchmarks and verify improved environmental impacts. By addressing the environmental issues inherent in their business model, companies not only improve their practices, but also ensure the sustainability of their core business and transform entire markets toward a more sustainable future.

WWF Corporate Partnerships addressing Climate Change

Climate Savers | HP  | HSBC | Allianz

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WWF Experts

Richard Moss
Vice President and Managing Director for Climate Change 

“Climate change and what we do about it is going to transform the world much more rapidly than people realize. It’s my goal to get us moving to a world we will want, not one we’ll regret leaving for our children and grandchildren.”

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Expedition Diary

Take a journey with Lara Hansen, WWF's chief climate change scientist, to Fiji, where WWF is studying the effects of climate change

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Climate witness

Van Beacham is a professional fly fishing guide and lives in northern New Mexico.  Van has been fishing since he was 6 years old. Over the years he has witnessed many of the effects that warmer temperatures are having on the river systems and the fish that depend on them.
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» View All Climate Witness Accounts