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WWF in Nepal

WWF Nepal has almost 60 staff located in Kathmandu.

Founded: 1993

Contact

Sanjib Chaudhary

WWF Nepal Programme Office +977 1 4434820 ext 010

Office Address

WWF Nepal Programme Office

Baluwatar Kathmandu Post Box 7660 Kathmandu Nepal +977 1 4434820 +977 1 4438458

WWF Nepal website

WWF Projects in Nepal

Less Water More Rice

This project will progress the System of Rice Intensification (SRI) in India. It builds on the 3-year work of the Dialogue in Water, Food and Environm...

Modified: Sep 2009 - Started: Jan 2008

WWF Tiger Action Plan

Drawing upon 4 decades of tiger conservation work with partners around the globe, WWF has developed a new and far-reaching strategy for tiger conserva...

Modified: Sep 2009 - Started: Apr 2002

Asian Rhino and Elephant Action Strategy (AREAS)

WWF initiated the development of an Asian Rhino and Elephant Action Strategy (AREAS), following priorities defined in the WWF Asia/Pacific Regional St...

Modified: Sep 2009 - Started: Jul 1999

Wetland management in Royal Chitwan National Park (RCNP). Nepal.

Conservation of the Terai Arc, Nepal

Located in the shadow of the Himalayas, the Terai Arc covers 5 million hectares from Nepal's Bagmati River in the east to India's Yamuna River in the ...

Modified: Aug 2009 - Started: Jul 2003

Conservation News & Resources from Nepal

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Demand for tiger body parts used in traditional Chinese medicine and habitat fragmentation from unsustainable regional infrastructure development have driven the decline of the region’s Indochinese tiger population.

Disappearing Greater Mekong tigers underscore global threats

Tiger numbers have fallen by more than 70 percent in slightly more than a decade in the Greater Mekong, with the region’s five countries containing only 350 tigers, according to a new WWF report.

Posted on 26 January 2010 | 10 comments | Read more

“Environment and biodiversity are no longer subjects for conservationists and scientists only.  They have to be treated by politicians with as much attention as an economic crisis or upcoming elections,” she said.

Conservation champion Yolanda Kakabadse starts term as WWF President

Gland, Switzerland - WWF’s new President, Yolanda Kakabadse, says humans and nature have a shared interest in protecting the environment, arguing that politicians should give conservation issues as much attention as an economic crisis.

Posted on 12 January 2010 | 7 comments | Read more

Mass 'Climate Shame' demonstration outside the Klimaforum temporary building, where all NGO's set up a new base after being denied further access to the Bella Centre.

Copenhagen Accord: half-baked text and unclear substance

The UN climate talks in Copenhagen were inches away from total failure and ended with an outcome far too weak to tackle dangerous climate change, WWF said today. “Copenhagen was at the brink of failure due to poor leadership combined with an unconvincing level of ambition”, said Kim Carstensen, Leader of WWF’s Global Climate Initiative.

Posted on 19 December 2009 | Read more

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