Coral reefs cover less than 1% of the ocean yet sustain over 25% of marine life and support the well-being of nearly 1 billion people worldwide The 2025-2030 WCS Coral Reef Conservation Strategy centers high integrity climate-resilient coral reefs The strategy positions coral reefs as a critical solution to the interconnected crises of climate change, systemic health decline, and biodiversity loss Watch The Coral Strategy Video HERE Download photo here
NEW YORK, NY (September 25, 2025) – The Wildlife Conservation Society (WCS) today launched its 2025–2030 Coral Reef Conservation Strategy (read it here), a landmark plan to conserve the world’s most climate-resilient coral reefs. Rooted in more than 40 years of WCS experience and new cutting-edge science, the strategy places high integrity climate-resilient coral reefs (HICOR) at the heart of global conservation action.
Coral reefs are biodiversity hotspots and lifelines for coastal communities, covering less than 1% of the ocean but sustaining more than 25% of marine species and supporting nearly 1 billion people. Yet, they are among the ecosystems most at risk from climate change – some estimates show half of the world’s live coral has already been lost with the worst global bleaching event on record that has now hit more than 80% of the planet’s reefs.
But not all hope is lost.
“The world has likely already crossed 1.5°C of warming, and coral reefs are at a tipping point, but our science shows a clear path forward,” said Dr. Stacy Jupiter, Executive Director of WCS’s Global Marine Program. “Some coral reefs are defying the odds and have the ability to survive and fight back against the impacts of climate change – if we find them and protect them. This strategy is our commitment to act on that evidence.”
To turn the tide for coral, WCS is centering its new strategy on these high integrity climate-resilient coral reefs: reefs with enough live coral cover, species diversity, and reef fish biomass to avoid, resist, and recover from climate impacts. These are the reefs with the ecological integrity needed to withstand climate impacts and serve as the foundations for nature’s global recovery.
"This strategy is about more than just preventing loss and saving coral reefs,” said Dr. Emily Darling, Director of Coral Reef Conservation at WCS who led the strategy process. “It’s about building a future where oceans thrive, communities prosper, and hope endures. By focusing on the coral reefs most likely to withstand climate change, we can spark recovery, build a resilient future, and show what’s possible when science, collaboration, and commitment come together."
The new strategy sets out three goals: 1) understand and identify HICOR, 2) safeguard reefs through diverse and integrated conservation action, and 3) connect people to drive system-level change. By 2030, WCS and partners will:
“In the face of unprecedented pressures on coral reefs, this strategy renews our focus on resilience," said Joe Walston, Executive Vice President for Global Conservation at WCS. “By combining cutting-edge science, political action, and the co-creation of local solutions, we are investing in the reefs that have the greatest chance of surviving today. These reefs will not only endure but also drive recovery for the oceans and communities of tomorrow.”
WCS runs the world’s largest field-based conservation program, protecting habitat for more than 40 percent of Earth’s known biodiversity in partnership with governments, Indigenous Peoples, Local Communities, and the private sector. The 2025-2030 Coral Reef Conservation Strategy was co-created by more than 70 conservation practitioners across WCS, who came together in early 2025 to generously contribute knowledge and insights from their cumulative decades of experience in place-based, collaborative conservation work.
This work builds on years of collaboration with long-standing funding partners – including the Bloomberg Ocean Initiative, The Tiffany & Co. Foundation, and the Paul M. Angell Family Foundation – whose support has advanced coral conservation around the world.
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