From Sara, WWF Action Team <[email protected]>
Subject What's happening in the Amazon—and why it matters here at home
Date November 11, 2025 11:06 PM
  Links have been removed from this email. Learn more in the FAQ.
  Links have been removed from this email. Learn more in the FAQ.
WWF

When we lose tropical forests, we don't just lose trees. ‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;‌&nbsp;

View email as a webpage ([link removed])

&nbsp;
([link removed])
&nbsp;

TAKE ACTION ([link removed])

&nbsp;

([link removed])

Protect Tropical Forests

&nbsp;

Dear John,

Right now, world leaders are gathered for COP30 in Belém, Brazil—in the heart of the Amazon rainforest.

The Amazon is dangerously close to a tipping point: approximately 17% has already been lost. Scientists warn that a 20–25% loss could trigger an irreversible collapse.

When that happens, we all pay the price:

More extreme heat waves and unpredictable weather

Higher food prices and increased food insecurity as crops fail

Water shortages affecting communities everywhere

This isn’t a distant problem. Tropical forests regulate weather patterns, purify water supplies, and help keep our climate stable enough to grow the food we depend on. They're working for you right now, whether you see them or not.

Nature needs us now to protect the tropical forests that make our lives possible. World leaders at COP30 need to hear from you ([link removed]).

Your message takes 2 minutes and could help shift the conversation at the world’s most important climate meeting this year.

Protect tropical forests ► ([link removed])

Sincerely,

Sara
WWF Action Team

P.S. I know there's a lot competing for your attention. But this is one of those moments where your voice can actually push leaders to do something big ([link removed]).

&nbsp;

&nbsp;

Photos: Amazon rainforest © WWF-Brazil / Adriano Gambarini

Contact us ([link removed]) | Update profile ([link removed]) | Privacy policy ([link removed]) | State disclosures ([link removed]) | Unsubscribe ([link removed])

Was this forwarded to you? Subscribe to WWF email ([link removed])

¿Hablas español? Visita Descubre WWF ([link removed])

© 2025 World Wildlife Fund ([link removed])

1250 24th Street, N.W.
Washington, DC 20037

([link removed])

([link removed])

([link removed])

Reduce&nbsp;&nbsp;|&nbsp;&nbsp;Reuse&nbsp;&nbsp;|&nbsp;&nbsp;Recycle
Screenshot of the email generated on import

Message Analysis