Our solutions in Thailand

Indian elephants (Elephas maximus bengalensis) carrying their trainers across a river at the Thai ... / ©: WWF-Canon / Martin HARVEY
Indian elephants (Elephas maximus bengalensis) carrying their trainers across a river at the Thai Elephant Conservation Centre. Chiang Mai, Thailand
© WWF-Canon / Martin HARVEY

Our work in Thailand

From modest beginnings in the early 1980s, to a large transboundary programme today, WWF Thailand has grown to become a major player in Southeast Asia's conservation mosaic.
In 1982, WWF raised fund to support the establishment of ‘Wildlife Fund Thailand (WFT)' as a WWF associate. Onward to January 1995, WWF Thailand opened its own project office and became a WWF Thailand Programme Office in July 1999.

WWF Thailand and WWF Indochina (Cambodia, Lao PDR, and Vietnam) merged on 1 November 2005 to become the WWF Greater Mekong Programme. The programme works on regional and national projects across the 4 countries and focuses on 3 key ecoregions recognized within the WWF Global 200 ecoregions.