World Wildlife Fund (1983: Doomsday)

The World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF) coordinates the League of Nations environmental activities, assisting developing countries in implementing environmentally sound policies and practices. It was founded as a result of the LoN Conference for the Human Environment in June 2009 (it was an independent organization before the Conference) and has its headquarters in Caracas,Venezuela (because of being a member of SAC ). WWF also has six regional offices and various country offices.

WWF is the designated authority of the LoN system in environmental issues at the global and regional level. Its mandate is to coordinate the development of environmental policy consensus by keeping the global environment under review and bringing emerging issues to the attention of governments and the international community for action.

Currently, much of its work focuses on the conservation of three biomes that contain most of the world's biodiversity: forests, freshwater ecosystems, and oceans and coasts. Among other issues, it is also concerned with endangered species, pollution and climate change.

Pre-Doomsday
The organization was formed as a charitable trust on September 11, 1961, in Morges, Switzerland, under the name World Wildlife Fund. It was an initiative of Julian Huxley and Max Nicholson, who had thirty years experience of linking progressive intellectuals with big business interests through the Political and Economic Planning think tank.

WWF has set up offices and operations around the world. It originally worked by fundraising and providing grants to existing non-governmental organizations, based on the best-available scientific knowledge and with an initial focus on the protection of endangered species. As more resources became available, its operations expanded into other areas such as the preservation of biological diversity, sustainable use of natural resources, the reduction of pollution, and climate change. The organization also began to run its own conservation projects and campaigns, and by the 1980s started to take a more strategic approach to its conservation activities.

Doomsday
The WWF lost many members in the Doomsday, and the various offices were destroyed or abandoned because the organization lost contact with the other members and lost the money and support from people and the collapsing governments world wide, the WWF finally collapsed...

The members that survived started their own organizations in their surviving communities or new countries, or moved to the SAC or the ANZC.

Post-Doomsday
After Doomsday the LoN was created. Earth changed after Doomsday(see climate ), this changes bring joy to some species and bring threat to others, so the LoN decided to create an organization that would be in charge of Earth's environment, and the Lon Conference for Human Environment was taken on June 2009. The result of this Conference was the creation and revival of the WWF but as a LoN organization.

WWF's current strategy for achieving its mission specifically focuses on restoring populations of 36 species (species or species groups that are important for their ecosystem or to people, including elephants, tunas, whales, dolphins and porpoises, and bigleaf mahogany), conserving 35 globally important ecoregions around the world (including the Arctic, the Amazon rainforest, the Congo Basin and the Coral Triangle), and reducing people’s ecological footprint in 6 areas (carbon emissions, cropland, grazing land, fishing, forestry and water).

The organization also works on a number of global issues driving biodiversity loss and unsustainable use of natural resources, including finance, business practices, laws, and consumption choices. Local offices also work on national or regional issues.

WWF works with a large number of different groups to achieve its goals, including other organizations, governments, business, investment banks, scientists, fishers, farmers and local communities. It also undertakes public campaigns to influence decision makers, and seeks to educate people on how to live in a more environmentally friendly manner.

WWF scientists and many others identified 238 ecoregions that represent the world's most biologically outstanding terrestrial, freshwater and marine habitats, based on a worldwide biodiversity analysis which the organization says was the first of its kind.