We have connected with a number of important organisations to further our conservation work and achieve greater impact in the places where we operate.

Since 2015, the National Geographic Okavango Wilderness Project has been working with communities and governments to secure permanent, sustainable protection for the greater Okavango Basin, which spans Angola, Namibia and Botswana. A team of National Geographic Explorers, local and regional experts, and partners at the Wild Bird Trust are working to accomplish this through rigorous scientific research, advancing traditional knowledge and implementing impactful conservation education projects, as well as conducting storytelling about the ecosystem and the people who live there.
In 2021, the National Geographic Society and De Beers entered a partnership, Okavango Eternal. Through the Okavango Eternal partnership, the NGOWP team has been able to scale and accelerate essential, community-driven work across the Basin.


Since 1988, Rainforest Trust has been working with partners to safeguard imperiled tropical habitats and threatened species by helping to establish protected and conserved areas in partnership with Indigenous and local organizations and communities. To date, Rainforest Trust has helped protect more than 60 million acres of vital habitat across Latin America and the Caribbean, Africa, and the Asia-Pacific region. Rainforest Trust is a nonprofit organization that relies upon the generous support of the public to successfully implement its important conservation action. The organization is proud of earning a 4-star rating from Charity Navigator.



The HALO Trust is a humanitarian organisation working to clear landmines and other remnants of conflict, enabling safe access to land and resources for local communities.
In southeast Angola, HALO’s work has made previously inaccessible areas of the Okavango River Basin safe for people to live, work and move freely. This has also created opportunities for scientific research and conservation efforts in a region that was largely unexplored for decades.


Founded in 1996, the Kissama Foundation is a non-governmental organisation dedicated to the protection, conservation, management and study of Angola’s fauna and flora.
Through initiatives such as its internship programme for young conservationists, the Foundation supports biodiversity research while building local capacity and creating opportunities for the next generation of environmental stewards.
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