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‘AWARE Week’ Returns This September

The second-annual “AWARE Week” to promote ocean conservation and protection will take place September 14-22, PADI and Project AWARE have announced.

Coinciding with International Coastal Cleanup Day on September 21st, AWARE Week 2019 encourages dive professionals and the global dive community to lead or take part in a variety of activities and courses. Many of the activities will focus on tackling ocean pollution, raising awareness about plastic pollution, and empowering local communities to take positive actions for a clean and healthy ocean.

According to Drew Richardson, President and CEO of PADI Worldwide and Project AWARE Chairman of the Board:

“Working together with Project AWARE, our long-time partner in conservation, and PADI Dive Centers and Resorts around the world, AWARE Week empowers even more scuba divers to truly be a force for good. Whether it’s reporting Dive Against Debris data, making every dive a survey dive, saying ‘no’ to single-use plastics or making a conscious effort to reduce your plastic footprint, no action is too small to make a difference. AWARE Week provides the tools and inspiration to educate and encourage local action for global impact.”

Ever since the landmark television miniseries Blue Planet II, ocean plastic pollution has become a popular topic: Recent studies estimate that as much as 250 million metric tons of plastic could make its way into the ocean by 2025. AWARE Week marks the perfect time to focus on this issue through local community action and active participation in Dive Against Debris, Project AWARE’s flagship citizen-science program.

Although it’s believed more than 70 percent of marine debris entering the ocean ends up on the seafloor, little quantitative information is available regarding the types and quantities of this trash. The Dive Against Debris program aims to fill this gap, providing quantitative data and an accurate perspective about underwater marine debris to drive policy change. Dive Against Debris data collected during AWARE Week and throughout the year helps Project AWARE highlight the underwater view of ocean plastic pollution, and identify target areas where waste-prevention efforts are needed most.

Danna Moore, Global Operations Director for Project AWARE, says:

“We can all be part of the solution. Lead the way for your student divers or friends and family to become ocean activists. Provide them with the tools and knowledge they need to protect our ocean planet on every dive or at home. Our collective actions add up to big results and take us one step closer to a clean ocean.”

In addition to equipping divers with the skills needed to conduct Dive Against Debris surveys, AWARE Week is also designed to bring together divers from all over the world to be a voice for the ocean and act for change. From learning about tips to protect the ocean planet to understanding how underwater citizen science and marine debris data can help affect policy change, AWARE specialty courses give ocean enthusiasts the power to protect the ocean, with or without their fins, this AWARE Week and all year.

During AWARE Week, PADI and Project AWARE are calling on divers to make a positive impact for a healthier ocean by prioritizing initiatives focused on conservation-minded practices, taking the Project AWARE Specialty and Dive Against Debris Specialty courses, and making every dive a survey dive.

For more info, go to projectaware.org.

John Liang
John Lianghttps://www.deeperblue.com/
John Liang is the News Editor at DeeperBlue.com. He first got the diving bug while in High School in Cairo, Egypt, where he earned his PADI Open Water Diver certification in the Red Sea off the Sinai Peninsula. Since then, John has dived in a volcanic lake in Guatemala, among white-tipped sharks off the Pacific Coast of Costa Rica, and other places including a pool in Las Vegas helping to break the world record for the largest underwater press conference.

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