Environmental Initiatives

Media Inquiries

If you are a journalist and would like additional information, please visit the Media Contacts page.

Media Contacts

Subscribe to News Feeds

Pew offers news delivered to your desktop via RSS feed. Subscribing is easy. To learn more or get started, follow the link below.

Subscribe to News Feeds

For The Record

When Pew’s work is questioned or criticized we respond through letters to the editor or op-eds.

Read Pew's Responses

America's Living Oceans: Charting a Course for Sea Change

Report

Related Experts

  • Christopher Mann

    Christopher Mann

    Director, Environment

    Read bio

     

See all of our Experts

America’s oceans are in crisis and the stakes could not be higher. More than half the U.S. population lives in coastal counties. The resident population in this area is expected to increase by 25 million people by 2015. More than 180 million people visit the shore for recreation every year.

Though a price tag has never been assigned to our coastal economy, it is clear that it contributes significantly to the nation’s overall economic activity. Tens of thousands of jobs in fishing, recreation, and tourism depend on healthy, functioning coastal ecosystems. Now, thousands of jobs and billions of dollars of investment have either been lost or are jeopardized by collapsing fisheries. Pollution and sprawl threaten ocean-related tourism and recreation, far and away the largest component of the coastal economy.

But more than jobs are at stake. All Americans depend on the oceans and affect the oceans, regardless of where they live. Ocean currents circulate the energy and water that regulate the Earth’s climate and weather and, thus, affect every aspect of the human experience. Our very dependence on and use of ocean resources are exposing limits in natural systems once viewed as too vast and inexhaustible to be harmed by human activity. Without reform, our daily actions will increasingly jeopardize a valuable natural resource and an invaluable aspect of our national heritage.

In the midst of crisis, there are expressions of hope and signs of success. Striped bass, severely depleted along our Atlantic shores, made a striking comeback when given a chance. North Atlantic swordfish recently did the same in response to lower catch limits and closed nursery areas. Seabirds, kelp beds, and fish communities returned to the coastal waters off Los Angeles after waste discharges were reduced. Proven, workable solutions to the crisis in our oceans exist but such successes will remain the exception rather than the rule until we chart a new course for ocean management.

Read the executive summary and the summary report for America's Living Oceans. A link to the full report is below.

Executive Summary: America's Living Oceans Report

Full Report: America's Living Oceans: Charting a Course for Sea Change

 

Related News and Resources

  • The Science of a Marine Reserve

    • Other Resource
    • Jun 19, 2013
    The most isolated, inhabited archipelago in the world, the islands lie 2,400 kilometres (1,500 miles) from the nearest human settlement in the middle of the southern Atlantic Ocean between South Africa and South America, and the only way to get there is by ship.

    More

  • Protect Arctic Marine Mammals From Oil and Gas Activities!

    • Action Alert
    • Jun 11, 2013

    The National Marine Fisheries Service, or NMFS, and the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management, or BOEM, recently revised the region’s environmental impact statement to assess the potential effects of commercial activities on marine mammals and Arctic communities. Help protect the Arctic Ocean and its dependent communities by telling NMFS and BOEM to take a more precautionary approach in this vulnerable ecosystem.

    More

  • Australia Clears Another Hurdle in Creating World's Largest Marine Park System

    • Other Resource
    • Jun 10, 2013
    In the long campaign to ensure a sustainable future for Australia’s oceans, the final pieces of the puzzle are falling into place—with the potential to change forever how Australians view the sea that surrounds their land.

    More

  • The Impact of Man-Made Noise on Arctic Marine Mammals

    • Other Resource
    • Jun 07, 2013
    Arctic marine mammals depend more on their hearing than other senses because sound travels well underwater. As the Arctic Ocean undergoes many changes, it's becoming noisier—and that could have profound impacts on animals that rely on sound to survive.

    More

  • Science Short: Arctic Noise

    • Fact Sheet
    • Jun 07, 2013
    Because sound travels well underwater, hearing is the most important sense for marine mammals, including those found in the Arctic. Bowhead whales, walrus, and ringed, ribbon, and bearded seals rely on both making and hearing sounds to navigate, contact each other, court mates, find food, and avoid predators.

    More

  • Celebrating World Oceans Day

    • Other Resource
    • Jun 07, 2013
    Our oceans, which cover about 70 percent of the Earth’s surface, serve humanity by supplying food, oxygen, life, a means of transportation, adventure, beauty, and spiritual balm. Yet they are under significant stress from human activity.

    More

  • Promise of the Arctic Conference Points to Opportunities and Risks

    • Media Coverage
    • May 29, 2013
    (KPLU) The Arctic is getting hotter faster than any part of the globe. Experts predict the region will be free of sea ice during the summer within about 20 years.

    More

  • Dispatch from Brussels

    • Other Resource
    • May 28, 2013
    Members of Pew’s marine conservation team had a chance to connect with representatives of Antarctic Treaty countries from around the world at meetings May 20 to 29 in Brussels.

    More

  • Protecting Our Coral Sea

    • Other Resource
    • May 17, 2013

    Progress continues towards officially creating the world's second largest fully protected marine reserve in Australia’s Coral Sea. Queenslanders join together to thank Australia’s Environment Minister Tony Burke for establishing the Coral Sea Marine Reserve.

    More

  • Quiz: Find Out Your Penguin Personality

    • Other Resource
    • May 17, 2013
    As world leaders consider whether to protect some of the best penguin habitat on Earth, take this short quiz, and discover what you have in common with your feathered friends of the Antarctic. Please remember to take action to protect their homes.

    More

  • White House Arctic Strategy: What's Next for Oil, Gas Drilling?

    • Media Coverage
    • May 13, 2013
    (The Christian Science Monitor) For all the energy prospects bandied about concerning the Arctic – including a new White House strategy paper for the region – oil drilling in US Arctic waters has come to a temporary pause.

    More

  • Arctic Scientists Take On ‘Emerging Research Questions’

    • Media Coverage
    • May 09, 2013
    (Alaska Public Media) Environmental changes from climate warming are hitting the Arctic harder and faster than anyone predicted. This week, top Arctic scientists have been meeting in Anchorage looking for better ways to investigate and even track the changes and what they could mean.

    More

  • Time to Serve Up Antarctic Marine Reserves, Not Chilean Sea Bass

    • Other Resource
    • May 09, 2013
    “Chilean sea bass” is on the menu and in grocery stores, but before you pick up a knife and fork, consider that your dinner may have been fished from one of the last pristine environments on Earth.

    More

  • Federal Group Issues 'Call to Action' on Integrated Arctic Management

    • Other Resource
    • May 03, 2013
    A federal working group recommended in April that the Obama administration adopt a strategy called integrated Arctic management for making decisions about stewardship and development in America’s Arctic region. The science-based, stakeholder-involved approach seeks to foster thriving ecosystems, cultures, and economies.

    More

  • Celebrate World Penguin Day with Pew

    • Other Resource
    • Apr 18, 2013
    On World Penguin Day, held annually on April 25, penguin lovers, conservationists, and scientists all unite for one common purpose—to celebrate these amazing birds and to draw attention to the need to protect them.

    More

See more...

X
Sign In

Member Sign In

Forgot Password?
Submit Not a Member? Join!
X

Forgot Password?

Send Password Not a Member? Join!
X

Change Password

X
(All Fields are required)
Send Message
Share this on: