National Wildlife Refuge Association

NWRA’s mission is to engage and mobilize volunteers in building support for refuges, educate decision-makers in Washington, and lead diverse conservation partnerships designed to amplify the impact that refuges have in protecting wildlife habitat both within and beyond their formal boundaries.

NWRA is the chair of the Cooperative Alliance for Refuge Enhancement (CARE),[1] a coalition of 24 wildlife, sporting, science and conservation organizations.

[2][3] NWRA led efforts to stop construction of a road through federally designated wilderness in the Izembek National Wildlife Refuge in Alaska, publishing its "Road to Nowhere" report in 2008.

[4][5] In 2024, the NWRA sued to block the construction of clean-energy transmission lines through a Mississippi River wildlife refuge that would have connected more than 160 renewable energy projects to the Midwestern energy grid.

Interior Department and U.S. Army Corps of Engineers to add 35 acres of land to the refuge in exchange for using the 20 acres of refuge land in the path of the transmission line.