Looking

ahead

Tiger cub, India. © Richard Barrett / WWF-UK

Tiger cub, India. © Richard Barrett / WWF-UK

Following the launch of WWF’s new 12 year strategy on tiger conservation, we are in full implementation mode to achieve its ambitious objectives. Success will not be achieved alone and if there is an overarching focus in the coming years then it is one of partnership. Genuine and meaningful partnerships at all levels. 

  • Partnerships with tiger range country governments to support them to secure a viable future for their wild tiger populations and fulfil their commitments to the Global Biodiversity Framework.
  • Partnerships with people living in tiger landscapes, people who are Indigenous to those spaces with thousands of years of traditional ecological knowledge in their communities. 
  • Partnerships with our fellow conservation organisations, through the Tiger Conservation Coalition, to elevate all our influence and collective knowledge and capacity. 

The impact we are striving for goes far beyond tigers, it is about securing the last natural ecosystems in Asia, about climate resilience, about reversing biodiversity loss and about realising a nature positive world.

© WWF

© WWF

These links between tigers and a broader environmental impact are critical not only considering co-benefits, but also the needs and opportunities to finance tiger conservation. A pivotal and catalysing moment in 2024 will undoubtedly be the Sustainable Finance for Tiger Landscapes Conference in Bhutan and critically the action that then follows the conference. 

We cannot lose the momentum WWF and partners have spent decades building and we must push for sustainable financing at scale for tiger landscapes. The effort it will take to secure a viable future for wild tigers is daunting, but the growing wild populations across much of their range and the opportunities to bring tigers back to their historic range illustrates why we should be hopeful.

We are on a mission to ensure

these iconic animals thrive for

generations to come - join us.

Tigress and cub at Ranthambore Tiger Reserve, India. © Ondrej Prosicky / iStock / WWF

Tigress and cub at Ranthambore Tiger Reserve, India. © Ondrej Prosicky / iStock / WWF

Thank You

We could not do what we do without the generosity of every one of our donors. 

Your support is helping to secure a viable future for wild tigers and protect 22 tiger landscapes for the species and the 100+ million people that live or depend on resources from these areas. 

We've come a long way, but there's still much to be done.

To find out more about WWF's tiger programme head to our website.