Defending Our Mediterranean

The Mediterranean Sea plays an important part in the wider oceans system, which supports life on Earth. Its warm, highly saline waters provide spawning grounds for many species and carry a unique signature of nutrients and plankton, which can be detected many thousands of kilometers out into the Atlantic Ocean and beyond. The Sea is also a major oceanic highway for the great migratory fish such as bluefin tuna and home to endangered species such as monk seals, green and leatherback turtles.

It is a small but important part of our planet's oceanic system.Bordered by 19 countries and 46,000 km of coastline, its resources support millions of people.

Almost completely enclosed, it takes up to 100 years for the Sea to completely renew its waters, which are rich in nutrients with a high salt content. Although only small - accounting for less that one percent of the total marine environment - the Mediterranean Sea is home to a large number of species unique to the area and economically important fish stocks. It provides both warm and cold-water habitats, plunging to depths of 5000 meters in some places and has supported human civilization for millennia.

Paradise Lost?

But this beautiful and valuable ecosystem is under siege. Because it is comparatively small, virtually enclosed and slow to renew its waters, it is highly vulnerable to over-exploitation. As with most other parts of the planet's oceanic system, this region is under sustained pressure from a variety of threats. Amongst these are: overfishing, drift netting, aquaculture along with other threats like climate change, invasive species, pollution, shipping, tourism and the increase in human populations.

Coris Julis over a Zostera

The Mediterranean Sea is part of the wider ocean system, which provides services to the planet and humankind including the production of over half our oxygen, the creation and distribution of weather systems and the transfer of nutrients and energy currents around the world - vital functions that maintain the overall health of our planet.

To this day, people continue to rely on the Mediterranean Sea for its biological resources, transport links between the continents and its oil and gas reserves. So much so, that the combined pressures are pushing the Sea to the brink of collapse.

Marine Reserves needed NOW!

Barely one percent of the Mediterranean Sea is fully protected - a far cry from the 20 to 50 percent recommended by scientists. There is a serious risk that the Mediterranean will be exploited beyond its natural ability to replenish and recover, affecting its health and productivity for future generations - not just within the immediate region, but far beyond. In order to avoid this - the Mediterranean is desperately in need of protection through the establishment of Marine Reserves.

The latest updates

 

Urgent protection needed for tuna

Image | January 20, 2011 at 17:49

Divers from Greenpeace and Taiwanese environmentalists form a school of tuna to give an eye-catching warning about the urgent need for better fisheries management at a Greenpeace organized activity in Pingtung County, Taiwan. Greenpeace is...

Human beach art calls for marine reserves in Taiwan

Image | January 18, 2011 at 18:44

More than 100 hundred volunteers participated in a Greenpeace-organised human banner activity where they composed the words "Marine Reserves Now" in Chinese on Baisha beach, Kenting National Park, Taiwan. Greenpeace is promoting the...

Coming Soon to Taiwan: The Rainbow Warrior

Video | December 22, 2010 at 10:00

The Rainbow Warrior is coming to Taiwan in January 2011 to campaign on fisheries and the protection of the marine environment in East Asia.

USA: Step Up at Tuna Summit in Honolulu!

Blog entry by Sari Tolvanen | December 7, 2010 2 comments

Greenpeace activists hang a banner from Honolulu's iconic Aloha Tower the day before the Pacific Tuna Summit began, urging the Tuna Commission to save tuna. For the Pacific region and its people, no fish means no future. I am in...

Stories from the Rainbow Warrior: Karli on the tuna blockade

Blog entry by Dave W. | November 25, 2010 4 comments

Let’s be clear, environmental campaigning is usually hard graft, with long hours and many frustrations. It can involve long hours sitting in a boat somewhere cold, or hot, just waiting for something to happen. It might mean attending...

A Spanish View on ICCAT: the Bluefin Tuna Summit

Blog entry by Celia Ojeda Martinez | November 19, 2010

Celia Ojeda Martinez onboard the Arctic Sunrise during the 2010 Defending the Mediterranean expedition When I started working for Greenpeace Spain a few years ago, I knew that the bluefin tuna was an important and iconic fish...

UN Biodiversity Summit Closes: Sayonara, Nagoya

Blog entry by Nathalie Rey | October 29, 2010

Nathalie Rey (left) briefs reporters before the close of the Convention on Biological Diversity in Nagoya, Japan After two weeks of negotiations, this CBD COP has concluded and not without some last-minute drama. Unsurprisingly, a...

UN Biodiversity Summit Update: Latin American Nations Focus on Oceans

Blog entry by Samuel Leiva | October 28, 2010 2 comments

For the past 2 weeks here in Nagoya at the CBD, I've been participating in the negotiations about the future health of our oceans, officially called Marine and Coastal Biodiversity. The politicians here have been focusing on...

UN Biodiversity Summit Update: The Nail That Sticks Out Gets Hammered Down

Blog entry by Frode Pleym | October 27, 2010 3 comments

Frode Pleym (right) is part of the Greenpeace delegation at the UN Convention on Biological Diversity meeting in Nagoya, Japan. I will be the first one to admit that my home country Norway is not perfect. Still, it is a relatively...

Japanese Government Lagging at UN Biodiversity Summit

Blog entry by Wakao Hanaoka | October 26, 2010 3 comments

Wakao Hanaoka (left) briefs journalists at the Convention on Biological Diversity meeting in Nagoya, Japan Today, the Greenpeace delegation at the CBD summarized what has been happening here in Nagoya and reiterated our demands...

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