
Ocean Week In Review – June 4, 2026, What do Balloons, Graffiti and El Niño Have to do with the Ocean?
Ocean Week In Review – June 4, 2026, What do Balloons, Graffiti and El Niño Have to do with the Ocean?

Ocean Week In Review – June 4, 2026, What do Balloons, Graffiti and El Niño Have to do with the Ocean?

Ocean Week In Review – June 1, 2026, The Ocean Still Holds Secrets – What Scientists Have Recently Discovered

1. Costa Rica Says it Will Not Protect Any Shark Species of “Commercial Interest” This week Luis Guillermo Solis, the

1. Cayman Islands: Will They Pave Paradise? In July, Sea Save’s Week in Review reported on the proposed construction

1. Selfies Have Killed More People Than Sharks According to recent statistics, this year more people have been killed

That’s right everyone, today I’m heading off to Costa Rica to dive one of the most spectacular diving locations

1. Icelandic Whale Meat Arrives in Japan Via New Route This week, the Arctic’s untraveled Northeast Passage saw some unfavorable

1. SHWEEKEND Begins! I may have had a lot of plans this weekend but, those all went out the window

1. US Issues Arctic Drilling Permit to Royal Dutch Shell On Monday the US government gave Royal Dutch Shell permission

1. Synthetic Coral Could Remove Toxic Heavy Metals Scientist from Anhui Jianzhu University in China published a

1. Shifting Winds+Ocean Currents= Fewer Endangered Galapagos Penguins? The Galapagos Islands are known for their diverse and unique species,

1. Save Cayman! Many of us here at Sea Save had the honor of diving in the beautiful, rich,

1. Record-Beating Pacific Ocean Heat Seen Strengthening El Nino El Nino has increased our sea surface temperatures over the

1. Five Nations Sign to Protect Arctic from Unregulated Fishing Years ago, the Bering Sea “Donut Hole” was a

1. Managing Mining of the Deep Seabed In past Week in Review stories Sea Save has highlighted the increase

1. US, China, and Brazil Commit to New Climate Change Goals On Tuesday, the United States, China, and Brazil

1. State of Europe’s Seas Goes from Bad to Worse The European Environment Agency published a the first State