Wave Forward

Read about WWF's work to conserve our planet's vital marine environments and learn what you can do to help

Learn more.

Conservation Firsthand

Conservation Firsthand

Join WWF experts as they share their on-the-ground experiences in the places we're striving to save.
Learn more

Take Action

Travel

Join WWF's Conservation Action Network and speak out for wildlife and wild places around the globe. Learn more

Travel

Travel

Travel With WWF

Visit our travel section and choose from many amazing trips! Learn more

SUPPORT WWF

chasepromo

Sign up for a WWF Visa, and Chase will contribute $50 for each new WWF account opened and activated online.
Learn more

How We Do It

Government Relations and Policy

The Bering Sea and Kamchatka region is under increasing threat from climate change, oil spills and drilling. WWF's policy efforts are protecting this precious habitat by furthering legislative efforts to confront climate change and mitigate oil and gas development.
© WWF-Canon / Kevin SCHAFER

The primary work of WWF's government relations team is to collaborate with the U.S. Congress and the administration in achieving WWF's natural places conservation mission, and to secure funding from U.S. government partners to support our conservation programs and fieldwork around the world. Our goal is to influence broader, long-term governmental policy - domestically and internationally - that supports WWF's mission to conserve 19 of the world's most important natural places and significantly change global markets to protect the future of nature by 2015.

Learn more about the key issues we are focused on and how you can help:

Issues               

Conservation Action Network

Government Partnerships

Letters, Testimony & Documents

Newsroom       

 

 

email page    Please leave this field empty

Where In The World?

Click the globe

MORE ON GOVERNMENT RELATIONS AND POLICY

WWF Experts

Jason Patlis
Vice President and Managing Director
Government Relations

"Government is neither the problem nor the panacea, but it can be a powerful partner for conservation - one requiring both support and vigilance."

Read more