News
Show your support in your next virtual meeting by downloading an Oceana themed background! Encourage others to follow your example and defend our oceans by taking action with Oceana.
Today, Oceana released a new report that projects The Coca-Cola Company’s plastic use will exceed 9.1 billion pounds (4.1 million metric tons) per year by 2030 if the company does not change its ...
Are you an excellent relationship builder, project manager, strategic thinker, and writer? Come join Oceana’s Science & Strategy department, led by its Chief Scientist and dedicated to fostering the ...
*For general press inquiries or if you aren’t sure who is the best person to contact, please email [email protected].
The nascent industry of deep-sea mining threatens the health, and perhaps the very existence, of deep ocean communities. It would destroy the physical structures of the seafloor and the ecosystems ...
TELL COCA-COLA TO RECOMMIT TO A WORLD WITHOUT WASTE! Coca-Cola’s plastic use is a big problem for our oceans. But there is hope. Coca-Cola has a solution for its plastic problem – reusable packaging.
Oceana press releases share updates on our campaigns and mission to protect and restore the world’s oceans. They include explanations of the issues that our oceans face, our work to solve those issues ...
Coca-Cola has a plastic problem. Oceana’s report projects The Coca-Cola Company’s plastic use will exceed 9.1 billion pounds (4.1 million metric tons) per year by 2030 if the company does not change ...
Do you want to use your storytelling skills to build support for ocean conservation? Oceana is seeking a Digital Content Specialist to bring our mission to life across digital platforms and engage a ...
Oceana was established in 2001 by a group of leading foundations — Oak Foundation, The Pew Charitable Trusts, The Homeland Foundation (now Marisla Foundation), Rockefeller Brothers Fund and Sandler ...
We are restoring the world’s wild fish populations to serve as a sustainable source of protein for people.
CORRECTION: This report referenced a bycatch rate of 40% as determined by Davies et al. 2009, however that calculation used a broader definition of bycatch than is standard. According to bycatch as ...
Results that may be inaccessible to you are currently showing.
Hide inaccessible results