Protect the Hauraki Gulf
© Daryl Trockler

Protect the Hauraki Gulf

Urge the Prime Minister to reverse the decision to allow harmful fishing in new protected areas

Explore

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Eagle ray swimming

Looking after the ocean

We have a diverse range of coastal and marine environments, habitats, and species. We want to make sure it stays that way.

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Bryde's Whale

Looking after species

Working to protect taonga marine species and their habitats through research, advocacy and conservation. 

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Wind turbine

Climate action

The climate crisis affects every corner of our planet – from the poles to the tropics, and from the mountains to the oceans.

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Building traps

Conservation & Education

Inspiring and enabling New Zealanders to care for their habitats and species as part of a healthier society and economy. 

© Bernard Spragg

Protect our Red-Billed Gulls

Imagine a summer without seagulls


If we don’t act – we won’t have to imagine it.

While still regularly seen along our coastlines, the oft-derided tarāpunga or red-billed gull is in serious decline.  

They are now more threatened than the North Island brown kiwi.

One of our most iconic seabirds, the population of red-billed gulls is projected to drop 50 to 70 percent over the next 30 years.

They need our help. Please make a donation to help save our gulls.

© naturepl.com / Pascal Kobeh / WWF

Our Moana Our Future

Our ocean is exceptional, but it is being negatively impacted by human activity. Heavily utilised areas like the Hauraki Gulf are more vulnerable to these impacts and are on the verge of ecological collapse.

If we don’t act now, species like the Antipodean Albatross or Maūi dolphin could be wiped out forever.

Our ocean and the life within are taonga that need protecting. Marine Protected Areas are an important way we can protect these habitats and species from harm.

Yet, despite our ocean territory being 15 times larger than our landmass, New Zealand currently has less that one percent of its ocean areas protected.

Help get 30% of our ocean protected by 2030.

© Brent Stirton / Getty Images / WWF-UK

Plastic pollution is a global problem

It needs a global solution.

In November 2024, governments will come together in Busan, Republic of Korea, for the fifth and last round of negotiations for a global treaty to end plastic pollution. 

This treaty is a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to create a global solution to this worsening global crisis. 

Unless governments agree on an ambitious and fair treaty with legally binding global rules, plastic pollution is likely to triple by 2040, accumulating in our food and water and exacerbating the risk of flooding.

The international community must keep the promise they made to end the plastic crisis. This must be the moment our leaders decide on bold, binding global actions across the entire plastic lifecycle to protect nature and human health and put our planet on a path to recovery. 

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