- Date: 30 October 2024
In the US Northern Great Plains, owners of 112 ranches are working with WWF to save one of the world’s last remaining grassland habitats. Multi-generational family ranchers across Montana, South Dakota, Nebraska, and Wyoming are contributing to important conservation efforts to restore and preserve grasslands by implementing nature positive changes on their ranches. The work is being done through the Ranch Systems and Viability Planning (RSVP) network – a program that provides comprehensive training and support for ranchers to develop sustainable grazing management plans. Ranchers can apply to receive technical assistance, educational training, participate in ecological monitoring, and connect with peers through networking opportunities.
- Date: 17 October 2024
- Author: Madalen Howard
In 2022, World Wildlife Fund (WWF) and Triangle Associates released a study showcasing the transformative benefits of replacing traditional milk cartons with bulk milk dispensers in K-12 schools. This research demonstrated that such a switch can dramatically cut packaging and milk waste, reduce school expenses, and boost student nutrition by increasing milk consumption. To help schools make this change, WWF’s report detailed several real-world school examples, with both milk and cost savings data, and a Cost Savings Estimate Calculator for schools to model their own potential savings. Now, a recent pilot project in Washington State offers compelling new evidence that bulk milk dispensers could be a game changer when it comes to reducing food waste in school cafeterias across the country.
- Date: 16 October 2024
Each year, October 16 marks World Food Day. This year’s theme, Right to foods for a better life and a better future, perfectly summarizes why WWF works on food. Food is not a nice to have, it’s a must have. But access to food doesn’t always come easy for everyone, and of the food we do produce – 40% of it is lost or wasted. By 2050, we’ll have 9 billion people to feed. If we’re going to do that, we need to find ways to improve the efficiency and productivity of how we produce and source our food so we can ensure a healthy future for both people and the planet.
From transformative global solutions, to making small changes in the school cafeteria, to embracing seaweed as a food source, in celebration of World Food Day, here are 3 food-focused solutions to help us rewrite the future of food.
1. Curbing Environmental Destruction for Food Production: Codex Planetarius is a proposed system of minimum environmental performance standards to improve the sustainability of globally traded food and soft commodities. Codex aims to grow demand for globally traded food while minimizing the negative environmental consequences. Dive into this concept on WWF's Nature Breaking Podcast - listen here.
“It’s time to wake up and change course. Instead of rewarding the best producers to improve, we must find a way to transform the least efficient producers; these producers are responsible for the lion’s share of environmental degradation, but they have historically been ignored in the conversation.”
Jason Clay
senior vice president and executive director of WWF's Market Institute

Seaweed farm in Maine
2. Embracing Seaweed as a Sustainable Food Source: Seaweed, although often overlooked in Western diets, has been a staple in many Asian cuisines for centuries. This rich source of vitamins, minerals and antioxidants is valued for its savory umami flavor. The cultivation of kelp, a popular type of seaweed, has a much lower environmental footprint compared to traditional agriculture on land. As climate change and increasing resource consumption create concerns over food security, kelp is gaining recognition as a food source with a low environmental impact. Learn more about this superfood.
3. Turning Cafeterias into Classrooms: The traditional classroom is not the only place where learning takes place. Since 2017, WWF has been turning cafeterias across the US into classrooms –empowering students to understand and act on the environmental consequences of food waste, such as its impact on climate change, water use, and biodiversity loss. Food Waste Warriors incorporates hands-on learning and encourages students to be advocates for sustainable food practices in their schools and communities. Learn more about Food Waste Warriors here and check out what one school in Georgia has been up to in this recent segment from ABC News:
- Date: 03 October 2024
- Author: Madalen Howard, WWF
The global food system is complex, shaped by the unique cultures, traditions, and environmental contexts of different regions. The newly launched Great Food Puzzle report introduces a groundbreaking approach to addressing the biodiversity, climate, and health crises through sustainable food systems. Rather than promoting a one-size-fits-all solution, this report helps countries identify actions that can be adapted to their specific contexts. By creating a typology of six Food Systems Types, the Great Food Puzzle reveals high-impact solutions for each group of countries, considering both environmental and socioeconomic factors.
One of the report’s most compelling findings is the unrealized potential of public education on healthy and sustainable food consumption. Raising awareness and changing behaviors are universal challenges, and some of the most innovative examples of food system transformation are already occurring within schools.
- Date: 12 September 2024
- Author: Pete Pearson
Food systems are the number one threat to nature and a major contributor to biodiversity loss. Feeding a growing world population while protecting nature and reducing GHG emissions is the imperative of our time. While the challenges are universal, solutions must be tailored to local contexts, as food systems are deeply influenced by culture, heritage, and local context. This means that what works in one place may not be effective in another.
The Great Food Puzzle series adapts solutions to the unique needs of countries by clustering countries with similar socioeconomic and environmental factors. This classification helps identify key actions to drive the shift toward healthier and more sustainable food systems—offering an opportunity for countries to learn from each other and emulate the successes of peers. The US has a similar type of food system to that of the U.K., the Netherlands, Germany, and Japan.
- Date: 10 September 2024
- Author: Daniel McQuillan
Investor interest in financing nature-based solutions is burgeoning, but given the $711 billion funding gap, you wouldn’t know it. With over half of the global GDP reliant on nature, and the global ambition to achieve goals set in the 2016 Paris Agreement and the Global Biodiversity Framework, financing nature-based solutions is smart business. And yet, the sector struggles to secure the necessary investment to combat nature loss.
The overwhelming majority of capital allocated to climate and nature is directed toward energy, transport and infrastructure- food systems receive only 4%. Underinvestment in agriculture, especially in the transition of global food systems toward regenerative and nature-positive production practices, stands out given the sector’s profound impact on nature. Agricultural production and food systems are the main drivers of biodiversity loss, deforestation, conversion of natural habitats, and topsoil loss. They consume 70% of freshwater and generate one third of global greenhouse gas emissions.
- Date: 21 August 2024
- Author: Christa Anderson, Jamie Bindon, and Martha Stevenson
McDonald’s Corporation is planting trees in hedgerows on French farms, with a target of 230,000 trees by 2030. Why? This is one of the activities that companies can implement to reduce agriculture and forestry greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions in their supply chains and count toward meeting their climate targets. All told, McDonald’s Corporation committed to reducing its forest, land, and agriculture emissions by 72% by 2050.
Other mitigation options for companies with food, agriculture, or forestry emissions include reducing emissions by halting deforestation and degradation, improving forest management, reducing agricultural emissions, and sequestering carbon in soil.
Businesses’ supply chains depend on climate and the services provided by nature. Companies with significant land-sector emissions are even more dependent than others, so they are strengthening their climate commitments to comprehensively include land emissions through the Science Based Targets initiative (SBTi). Since the SBTi began validating Forestry, Land, and Agriculture (FLAG) science-based targets last year, 83 companies have set targets to reduce their FLAG emissions and increase removals.1
More ways companies are taking action to reduce FLAG emissions include:
- Date: 09 July 2024
- Author: Julia Kurnik, Senior Director, Innovation Startups, Markets
Healthy diets are essential, yet only a small percentage of Americans consume the daily recommended servings of vegetables. Part of the problem is access. Millions of Americans, both in predominantly minority, urban communities, and in poorer, rural areas without major grocery chains, lack access to nutritious foods.
The problem isn’t a shortage of food. We grow plenty. But up to 40% of fresh produce grown in the US is wasted. Another real difficulty is that connections between local farmers and consumers, already broken, have split even further in recent years due to supply chain disruptions and market shifts. As a result, consumers struggle nutritionally, while small farmers struggle financially and are often forced to take off-farm jobs.
To bridge this gap, the Markets Institute at World Wildlife Fund (WWF) began to explore ways of establishing a direct connection — known as Farmers Post — between consumers and nearby farmers. We’re working with the United States Postal Service (USPS) to explore allowing consumers to have fresh produce delivered to their door. This would offer a new, and welcome, revenue stream for the USPS, which has struggled with tightening budgets in recent years, making use of its distribution expertise and its unique access to all households in the US.
- Date: 26 June 2024
- Author: Katherine Devine, Director, Business Case Development
Conservation efforts often face complex challenges that a single organization can't tackle alone. When a group of several major hotel chains wanted to drive measurable reduction of food waste in the hospitality sector in the U.S., for example, several companies created a pre-competitive pilot, called Hotel Kitchen, focused on food waste prevention, donation, and diversion from landfills. These types of groups, highlighted in a new WWF report, bring together diverse players in supply or value chains, from companies to NGOs and producers to researchers, to work on shared goals, which often include environmental impacts or, more directly, conservation objectives.
WWF's experience in launching and participating in such platforms suggests that no one-size-fits-all model dictates success of a precompetitive or multistakeholder group. But successful ones share some key characteristics. And there are lessons to be learned as well from initiatives that have run into roadblocks. Here are some characteristics that make them successful, illustrate pitfalls to avoid, and demonstrate how to maximize their impact.
- Date: 04 June 2024
- Author: Julia Kurnik
Our food supply chain is facing critical pressures and an uncertain future. California produces more than two-thirds of the fruits and nuts grown in the US and nearly half of all its vegetables. But due to climate change, water availability, and other factors, depending on California for all that food is increasingly unsustainable.
More than a decade ago, WWF’s Markets Institute identified this growing uncertainty in domestic food production as both a challenge and an opportunity. We set out to find “the next California,” a place to build a sustainable and equitable commercial-level specialty crop industry. We settled on the Mid-Mississippi Delta (western Tennessee, northwestern Mississippi, and eastern Arkansas) as a spot that could ease the pressure on California, avoid converting natural lands to farmland elsewhere in the country, and create an equitable engine of local growth.