Connecting Hearts and Pride To The Indonesian Oceans
75% of coral reefs are projected to die by 2050.
Rising Sea temperatures has threatened Coral reefs, causing Bleaching. Indonesia is home to some of the most resilient coral reefs on earth, capable of withstanding higher temperatures, but they are still at risk from illegal fishing techniques
93% of fish stocks are fully fished or depleted
Worldwide fish stocks are under threat due to rampant overfishing in certain areas hampering the natural regeneration of fish and disrupting oceanic ecosystems.
8 - 12 Million metric tons of plastic end up in our ocean every year.
Plastic waste such as straws, shopping bags, nets and also various other plasticsend up in our ocean from careless literring into the sea, or from land where waterways carry them into the sea
Role Of Indonesian Ocean Pride
Through social media Campaigns, Indonesian Ocean Pride exists to invite us all to take part in saving the oceans, the pride of Indonesia.
Indonesian Ocean Pride Founder Hamish Daud was invited to the voluntary days event hosted by Pertamina, where he was invited to talk about Indonesian Ocean Pride. In front of an audience of Pertamina employees as well as secondary school students, Hamish explained that volunteering isn’t only done only just be helping others directly but there... Read More
FuturePark X IOP Digital Art Gallery
Sorak Gemilang Entertainment (SGE) and Indonesian Ocean Pride’s (IOP) collaboration has created a new gallery in the digital gallery titled the ‘teamlab FuturePark And Animals of flowers Symbiotic lives”. This collaboration was done with the goals of increasing customer awareness of the biodiversity Indonesia’s oceans, and the threats it faces due to destructive human... Read More
The Ocean Cleanup Reveals Their First Interceptor In Cengkareng Drain
The Ocean Cleanup has Revealed that the first interceptor to be placed in a dirty river Interceptor 001 has been placed in the Cengkareng drain filtering plastics floating in the rivers. Letting the flow of the river guide plastics and other debris floating in the river guided to the mouth of the interceptor where it... Read More
Ocean plastic waste probably comes from ships, report says
By by Ivan Couronne Most of the plastic bottles washing up on the rocky shores of Inaccessible Island, aptly named for its sheer cliffs rising from the middle of the South Atlantic, probably come from Chinese merchant ships, a study published Monday said. The study offers fresh evidence that the vast garbage patches floating... Read More
Five Thousand Faces Glowed in The Light of The Two Storey Tall Outdoor Cinema Screen
The people of Waisai, the capital of the Raja Ampat Regency in West Papua, had made their way to the oceanside site just as the sun had set. They now sat beneath a clear night’s sky. As the film played, the crowd’s mood changed regularly – waves of collective emotion that rose and fell like... Read More
Help Our efforts directly in order to save the Ocean
Register with us in order to keep up with our latest efforts in saving the Indonesian oceans We are looking for dedicated volunteers to help with our efforts from accounting to extra hands to help our fieldwork.