File:Bund.jpg|BUND information stand on genetic engineering, 2007 in
Karlsruhe File:Bund08.jpg|Association's own orchard near Alt-Otzenrath on the edge of the
Garzweiler surface mining operation (expropriated in January 2008 and used for lignite mining) File:BUND-Infostand, Minden (2011).jpg|BUND information stand as part of an anti-nuclear vigil, 2011 in
Minden File:IAA 2021 und Markus Söder auf BUND Plakat Verkehrswendedemo Theresienwiese 09-11-2021.jpg|BUND at a rally for the mobility transition in Munich during the IAA 2021: poster of
Markus Söder and the car lobby File:Stadtwerder Bremen BUND-Kinderwildnis.jpg|Main entrance to the BUND Bremen
Kinderwildnis (children's wilderness) on the
Stadtwerder in early summer 2025
Activities • The association is consulted on interventions in nature – from ploughing a protected
orchid meadow to designating new construction areas to planning approval for an
airport – and is therefore required to write expert statements. This work is mainly carried out by volunteer members with the relevant expertise, and in some cases by the association's employees. • Many members are appointed (on a voluntary basis) to the Nature Conservation Advisory Council at the district, state or federal level. • Local groups maintain local
biotopes, pass on their knowledge through guided tours and lead children's groups. • BUND provides information material in the form of brochures, arguments, background reports and studies. • The BUND is a member of the
Grüner Strom Label e. V., which awards the seal of approval of the same name for green electricity. • The BUND is heavily involved in the debate on final storage and has a member on the Commission on the Storage of High-Level
Radioactive Waste.
Project examples • 1978:
Save the Birds campaign; presentation of the first German
solar-powered car. • 1981: First public reference to
forest dieback. • 1988:
Garden without Poison campaign. • 1989: The
Green Belt Germany project protects biotopes along the former
German-German border. • 1994: Publication of the first
environmental computer list. • 1995: Publication of the study
Zukunftsfähiges Deutschland with Misereor. • 2003: The magazine
GEO and BUND jointly organised the fifth
GEO Day of Biodiversity in the
Green Belt of Germany. In 24 hours, 500 experts mapped more than 5,200 different animal and plant species, including some that were previously considered extinct. • 2004: BUND presented its largest species conservation programme to date, the
Wildcat Rescue Network. According to the 'Wildcat Trail Plan' presented, existing forests with
wildcat populations throughout Germany are to be connected by a 20,000-kilometre network of bush and tree corridors. • 2005: BUND launched the
Butterfly Adventure campaign together with
ZDF and the UFZ–Umweltforschungszentrum Leipzig-Halle (UFZ–Environmental Research Centre Leipzig-Halle). (since 2006:
Abenteuer Faltertage). • 2005: The
BUNDstiftung (BUND Foundation) was established. • 2006: The action alliance
Future instead of lignite was founded with citizens' initiatives and other environmental associations. • 2007: BUND protested with the newspaper
Kohle-Express against the construction of more than 20 new coal-fired power plants in Germany and the expansion of lignite mining. • 2007: The
Adbusting competition denounced car manufacturers
BMW,
Mercedes and
Volkswagen for advertising fuel-guzzling cars, contrary to their promises. • 2008: Together with consumers and supported by
Sarah Wiener, BUND launched its campaign
For the love of nature. Without genetic engineering calling on
Edeka to label relevant products with the label
Without genetic engineering. • 2010: BUND Hamburg co-initiated a popular initiative aimed at re-municipalising the energy networks and establishing 'genuine' municipal utilities in Hamburg. The initiative, which comprised 24 organisations, succeeded in bringing about a referendum in 2013. • 2010: The campaign
Future without toxins aims to ensure that children grow up without exposure to harmful chemicals. Daycare centres can have dust samples from their facilities tested for plasticisers free of charge by BUND. Certain chemical pollutants have a hormonal effect and are suspected of causing infertility,
diabetes and
cancer. • 2011: Launch of the
Wildkatzensprung (Wild cat jump) project (funded by the Federal Biological Diversity Programme) with activities to protect wildcats in ten federal states. In the largest single project in the history of BUND, so-called 'green corridors' are being planted in
Hesse (Rothaargebirge-Knüll),
Lower Saxony (Harz-Solling),
Baden-Württemberg (Herrenberg region),
Rhineland-Palatinate (Westerwald/Taunus-Rothaargebirge) and
Thuringia (Greiz region). In addition, a nationwide genetic database on wildcats is being developed in cooperation with the Senckenberg Research Institute to document populations and migration patterns and optimise conservation measures for wildcats. With over 1,200 volunteers, the project is also one of the largest 'citizen science' projects in Europe and was successfully completed in 2017. • 2012: The
Urban Nature Campaign provided information about plants and animals in the city and encouraged people to experience and create natural spaces themselves, e.g. through urban gardening and a photo competition. • 2012: With
Stellen Sie die Giftfrage (Ask the poison question), BUND called on consumers to ask product suppliers about hazardous
ingredients (see
REACH Regulation). In cooperation with the Federal Environment Agency, a request generator makes it easier to formulate questions. • 2013: With the launch of the app ToxFox, BUND enables consumers to scan the
barcode of
cosmetics to see whether the product contains
hormone-disrupting chemicals. Since 2019,
nanoparticles have also been displayed. Alternatively, the EAN number can simply be entered online for the cosmetics check, and protest
emails can be sent directly to the
manufacturers. The analysis of the chemicals from the
INCI list of ingredients for around 60,000 care and cosmetic products was carried out in collaboration with the community database Codecheck.info. The study was criticised by the German Cosmetic, Toiletry, Perfumery and Detergent Association, which claimed that the quantities of potentially harmful ingredients were too low. On the other hand, natural cosmetics were largely free of hormone-active substances. • 2013: The
Wild bees action informed the public about the importance of and threats to the more than 550 species of wild
bees in Germany and provided tips on how to help wild bees. • 2014: BUND published the shopping guide
Microplastics – the invisible danger, sparking a public debate about microplastics in cosmetics and their entry into the oceans and rivers. • 2015: The magazine GEO and BUND jointly organised the
GEO Day of Biodiversity in the Hohen Garbe on the Elbe, the adjacent Garbe polder and the Aland lowlands. In 24 hours, experts mapped more than 1,400 plant and animal species, including a fungus species found in Germany for the first time. • 2018: On 23 November 2018, BUND and the
Solarenergie-Förderverein Deutschland (Solar Energy Promotion Association Germany), together with eleven individuals (including
Josef Göppel,
Hannes Jaenicke and
Volker Quaschning), filed a constitutional complaint with the Federal Constitutional Court (
BVerfG). This first lawsuit of its kind is intended to increase the pressure on politicians to do more to combat climate change. • 2024: Constitutional complaint (
Constitutional Complaint 2.0) against the Klimaschutzgesetz (Climate Protection Act); BUND together with the Solar Energy Promotion Association Germany ==Publications (selection)==