Aulani Wilhelm is Kanaka à Âiwi, born and raised in the Hawaiian Islands. She has decades of experience collaborating with Indigenous communities, bridging culture, community, and science to drive innovations in ocean policy and conservation.
âÂÂAulani leads Nia Tero, a Seattle-based nonprofit that supports Indigenous peoplesâ guardianship of ecosystems. Since becoming the organizationâÂÂs first Indigenous CEO in January, she has grown the nonprofit to become one of the largest supporters of Indigenous groups; in 2025, Nia Tero hit a milestone of awarding more than $100 million in grants since its inception in 2017. The group has supported 274 Indigenous peoples across more than 300 million acres of critical ecosystems.
'Aulani was named on the Time100 Climate list, recognizing the most innovative leaders driving business climate action. In her feature she reflects, "Simply put, we all need to stand behind the oldest, best proven protectors of the natural world: Indigenous guardians. As the world warms and climate impacts spread across the planet, the places that defy the odds are those where Indigenous Peoples still have the agency and means to protect their homelands. This is not by chanceâÂÂit is because these lands and waters are in the hands of communities who know and embrace their responsibility to care for nature."
She took the lead in designing and establishing the first-ever US marine national monument, the PapahÃÂnaumokuÃÂkea Marine National Monument and World Heritage Site in the Hawaiian Islands. On his 99th birthday, David Attenborough released Ocean, which includes a segment narrated by 'Aulani Wilhelm. "The film highlights PapahÃÂnaumokuÃÂkea, the worldâÂÂs largest no-fishing zone, where native fishers are reporting bountiful fish stocks, as populations recover and spill over into neighboring waters, and where seabird populations like the albatross have thrived as a result of the restrictions." 'Aulani makes a wider point that ocean guardianship can actually help boost sustainable fishing.
In 2023, âÂÂAulani joined Nia Tero, a nonprofit working to directly support Indigenous Peoplesâ guardianship and elevate the role and influence of Indigenous Peoples as essential to ensuring planetary health and habitability. After joining as their Chief Strategy & External Relations Officer, the Nia Tero Board of Directors unanimously supported the appointment of âÂÂAulani as our next CEO, beginning January 1, 2025, following an international executive succession process.
âÂÂAulani previously served as the Assistant Director for Ocean Conservation, Climate and Equity at the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy (OSTP). During her tenure the OSTP published the historic "Guidance for Federal Departments and Agencies on Indigenous Knowledge." The Guidance recognizes Indigenous Knowledge, or Traditional Ecological Knowledge, as "a valid form of evidence" and recognizes that many different ways of knowing strengthen decision making. Therefore, it calls on federal agencies to incorporate Indigenous Knowledge, as appropriate, in setting their policies.
âÂÂAulani co-chaired the Ocean Justice Strategy Workgroup of the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy. The group authored the "Ocean Justice Strategy," which builds ocean justice on environmental justice. It calls for equitable access to the benefits of oceans, engaging with Indigenous peoples in making decisions about oceans, and improving ocean education.
She also worked as Senior Vice President for Oceans at Conservation International, where she co-led the Blue Nature Alliance, a global partnership to catalyze the conservation of 18 million km2 of ocean.
She has played a pivotal role in shaping the emerging field of large-scale ocean conservation, leading the establishment of the PapahÃÂnaumokuÃÂkea Marine National Monument and World Heritage Site. As the first superintendent, she implemented a management policy that integrated Native Hawaiian cultural knowledge, traditions, and practices with Western science.
'Aulani is also the founder of Big Ocean, a network of the worldâÂÂs largest marine managed areas. Prior, she was director of ocean initiatives for NOAAâÂÂs Office of Marine Sanctuaries.
âÂÂAulani is a Mellon Distinguished Scholar at Arizona State UniversityâÂÂs Center for Imagination at the Borderlands. She holds an MS degree from Stanford University and a BA degree from the University of Southern California. At Stanford she was appointed the 2014 Social Innovation Fellow.
âÂÂAulani is committed to ocean conservation that honors Indigenous guardianship of lands and waters and that preserves and incorporates Native cultural heritages. The design of the PapahÃÂnaumokuÃÂkea Marine National Monument integrates Native Hawaiian cultural history and ceremony into its design. This is distinct from the usual philosophy of national parks, in which humans are seen as separate from nature and parks are created in order to limit human activities within them.
Wilhelm spoke about the role that Indigenous communities play in protecting ocean ecosystems at the United Nations Ocean Conference in June. âÂÂProtection is not a single act,â she said. âÂÂIt occurs over time and is driven by people and communities who care, who name places and maintain intergenerational relationships with them.âÂÂ
On hope: "Lots of people talk about hope as if it will enable solutions and without it, we are doomed. But I donâÂÂt think about hope that way. Hope helps me get up in the morning and fight another day but hope alone is not enough. If we merely use hope to distract us while we wait for someone to deliver solutions, then weâÂÂand that hopeâÂÂare part of the problem."
On Indigenous Peoples' Guardianship: "To change course, we must invest in the oldest, best-proven strategy to protect the natural world: Indigenous Peoplesâ Guardianship. Roughly half of the worldâÂÂs healthiest ecosystems are in the hands of Indigenous Peoples who live in close relationship to their lands and waters. This can expand with sufficient funding and policy changes that match the potential of Indigenous Peoplesâ Guardianship. Together, government and civil society can unlock the potential of Indigenous Peoplesâ Guardianship to do more than slow the loss of the natural world. We can reverse it before itâÂÂs too late."
In 2024, 'Aulani gave a keynote at Stanford Graduate Business School on 'Becoming an Ancestor,' and the ways in which they powerfully shape our lives.