World Wildlife Fund
The most definitive data available which comes from the WWP’s Corporate Sponsor 2022 Report is 167. All sponsors are required to provide them sustainability.
Based on the lack of visible pricing it appears this may be a free tool.
Unknown at this time.
82% of WWF’s spending is directed to worldwide conservation activities. In FY 22 of their program expenses were 332,898,558.
The WWF uses the Accountability Framework which is a roadmap for addressing deforestation, conversion and human rights in the agriculture and forestry sections. The Framework focuses on deforestation, ecosystem conversion, and human rights, including the rights of Indigenous Peoples, local communities, and workers. Through these entry points, it also supports effective corporate action on climate, nature, and sustainable development. In addition, the Framework provides practical guidance on a range of operational topics, such as traceability, due diligence, supplier management, and monitoring. Companies can use the Accountability Framework to help set strong goals, take effective action, and credibly report progress towards ethical supply chains. Financial institutions, industry and multi-stakeholder initiatives, and reporting initiatives can use the Framework as a practical guide to develop effective and aligned policies, actions, guidelines, and metrics.
Not listed on the Accountability Framework website.
WWF works to help local communities conserve the natural resources they depend upon; transform markets and policies toward sustainability; and protect and restore species and their habitats. Our efforts ensure that the value of nature is reflected in decision-making from a local to a global scale.
WWF connects cutting-edge conservation science with the collective power of our partners in the field, more than 1.3 million supporters in the United States and 5 million globally, and our partnerships with communities, companies, and governments.