
Is there a hidden tax to nature’s destruction?
Nature and biodiversity often lose to economic growth projects but besides planetary consequences, destruction could cost individuals and society more.
Fauna & Flora has been using the collective knowledge and experience of its people and its partners to protect nature worldwide for 120 years. Its work spans areas affecting nature and influencing the Earth’s future. These issues include habitat destruction, illegal wildlife trade, climate change, plastic pollution, corporate sustainability and global policy. Worldwide, it is helping to protect and restore 55 million hectares of habitat, including forests, peatlands, grasslands, seagrass meadows and the ocean. Millions of plant and animal species live in – and rely on – these habitats. Many are confined to a particular landscape and exist nowhere else in the world.
Nature and biodiversity often lose to economic growth projects but besides planetary consequences, destruction could cost individuals and society more.
The ocean is at a tipping point, and governments have a decision to make: is it business as usual, or can we work together to restore sustainable, clean and productive waters?

