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British registered charity From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
World Land Trust is a UK registered charity. Acting on its tagline of "Saving Land, Saving Species", the trust raises money to buy and then protect environmentally-threatened land, and therefore species, in Africa, Asia, and Central and South America. Since 1989, 1.1 million ha have been directly saved across all WLT programmes. A further 1.3 million ha have been co-funded by WLT. At the time of writing, 2,361,353 ha have been protected by WLT partners in all and 11,452,226 ha have been connected by WLT-funded corridors and extensions.
Founded | 1989 |
---|---|
Founders | John Burton Gerard Bertrand |
Type | registered charity |
Registration no. | 1001291 |
Location |
|
Area served | worldwide |
Key people | Catherine Barnard, CEO |
Revenue | £10 million (2023) |
Website | worldlandtrust |
The trust was founded in 1989 as the Programme for Belize to raise money to privately buy land in Belize to protect tropical rain forests in collaboration with Massachusetts Audubon Society.[1] The organisation later changed its name to the World Wide Land Conservation Trust, and then to World Land Trust.[1] John Burton was chief executive for thirty years until 2019, when Catherine Barnard took over.[2]
The Trust has since developed to help purchase and conserve land in 30 countries worldwide and had an annual income of £10 million in 2023.
The patrons of the trust are Sir David Attenborough, Steve Backshall, Chris Packham, and David Gower.[3] Supporters include Bill Oddie, Tony Hawks, Mark Carwardine and Nick Baker.[4]
Projects include:
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