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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Adopt a Polar Bear

Adopt Polar Bear

Make a symbolic Polar Bear adoption to help save some of the world's most endangered animals from extinction and support WWF's conservation efforts.
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Climate

What you can do

Climate change is already affecting habitats, wildlife and people, but we can all take steps to mitigate its damaging effects. Reducing carbon dioxide emissions by increasing the use of energy efficient technologies and renewable energy resources like wind and solar power are necessary steps in the effort to slow climate change.

Actions to slow climate change are available, and everyone has a role to play in implementing them at all levels of society. 

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Your Climate, Your Future
An interdisciplinary approach to incorporating climate change in your classroom
Check out WWF's high school climate curriculum
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Where In The World?

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Observations on Climate Change in the Arctic

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Fuller Symposium 2008

Biofuels: Which are More Sustainable?
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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.”

Learn more

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

 

Track Polar Bears

Track polar bears in three different areas of the Arctic: Svalbard, Norway; Hudson Bay, Canada and Beaufort Sea, Alaska, US.

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