News

19 countries ratified the treaty during the conference, while other nations, such as the UK, formally committed to ratifying ...
All four governments in the UK have published the latest assessment of how our own patch of the global ocean is doing; it makes for sobering reading.
Our mission to protect our ocean has never felt more urgent than now, as we confront a hidden but widespread threat to our seas – PFAS ‘forever chemicals’.
Join us for a beach clean and marine litter survey for Marine Conservation Society’s Beachwatch programme! Data collected from our beach cleans is hugely important as it helps us track the common ...
Years of campaigning and data collection by COAST, supported by Seasearch training by Calum Duncan (now Head of Policy and Advocacy at the Marine Conservation Society), helped secure the Lamlash Bay ...
Our first day at the UN Ocean Conference was filled with inspiring conversations and practical ideas to support ocean recovery. We co-hosted an ocean literacy event with the Welsh and Canadian ...
Beach stretch: Crosscanonby Date and time: 2 Jun 2025, 10 a.m. to 11 a.m. Meeting point: Crosscanonby Carr Nature Reserve car park, CA15 6SL, What3Words tens.simulates.transmitted and we will walk ...
The first step to protect our ocean is to ratify the High Seas Treaty as soon as possible by urgently laying it before Parliament. At the UN Ocean Conference in June, the UK Government committed to ...
This spring’s update to the Good Fish Guide sees Northeast Atlantic mackerel caught by midwater trawl move from a 3 to a 4, recommending that businesses do not source it. Mackerel caught in this way ...
While the window to influence the Water (Special Measures) Act has passed, we’re not finished fighting for our ocean. The new Water Commission, set up by the Government to advise on how to achieve a ...