Libmonster ID: U.S.-3591

June 8. World Oceans Day. A date when we should remember that planet Earth is not so much land as water. Oceans cover more than 70% of the surface, produce half of the oxygen we breathe, and regulate the climate. But we, humans, treat them like an endless dump and an endless fridge. This day is not a festival with balloons. It is a day of concern, awareness, and promise. Let's understand why oceans are important and how we can help them.

Oceans — the lungs of the planet

Every second breath of oxygen you take is thanks to phytoplankton in the ocean. These are the tiniest algae that absorb carbon dioxide and release oxygen. The rainforests we so protect only give us 30% of the oxygen. The rest is the ocean. Without it, we would suffocate. The ocean also absorbs excess heat (more than 90% of the greenhouse effect), slowing down global warming. But the price is high: water acidifies, corals bleach, and sea levels rise. The ocean is our silent savior, suffocating from our own gratitude.

The history of the holiday

World Oceans Day was proposed in 1992 at the Earth Summit in Rio de Janeiro. But it was officially established by the UN only in 2008. Since then, June 8 has been an occasion for environmentalists, scientists, and concerned individuals to draw attention to ocean issues. Each year it has a theme: restoration, sustainability, fighting plastic. In 2026, the theme is "Youth and the Ocean: A Wave of Change." A call to the new generation not to repeat the mistakes of the older ones.

Plastic disaster: numbers

Every minute, a truckload of plastic waste enters the ocean. By 2050, there will be more plastic in the water than fish by weight. Microplastic (particles less than 5 mm) has already been found in fish, salt, drinking water. It causes inflammation and hormonal imbalances. The Great Pacific Garbage Patch is no longer a patch, but a floating continent of plastic covering several million square kilometers. Sea turtles confuse bags with jellyfish, whales die with kilograms of plastic in their stomachs. On World Oceans Day, beach clean-up actions are held, but this is a drop in the ocean. We need to change the system: refuse single-use plastic, introduce deposit containers.

Overfishing: pirate fishing

90% of the world's fish stocks are either overfished or already depleted. Trawlers, with the help of modern sonar, sweep up everything alive, including spawning individuals. By-catch (dolphins, turtles, sharks) is thrown overboard dead. June 8 is a day to remember "marine sanctuaries" where fishing is prohibited. They occupy only 8% of the ocean, but even this is not observed. And do you know that annual subsidies for fishing (30 billion dollars) encourage overfishing? On World Oceans Day, environmentalists call for buying fish with the MSC label (sustainable fishing).

Coral reefs: underwater tropical forests

Reefs occupy 1% of the ocean's area but are home to 25% of marine species. Due to water warming (by 1-2 degrees), corals expel the symbiotic algae and bleach. If the temperature does not drop, they will die of starvation. Since 1950, we have lost half of the coral reefs. June 8 is a day for coral restoration projects (cultivation in nurseries and transplantation). But this is like treating a burn with a bandage when the whole house is on fire.

Sea level: threat to coastal cities

Due to the melting of glaciers, sea levels rise by 3-4 mm per year. To us, this is not noticeable. But for the residents of Bangladesh, Venice, the Maldives — it is a disaster. Millions of "climate refugees" in the coming decades. On World Oceans Day, scientists remind us: reducing CO2 emissions is a question of survival for coastal megacities. Shanghai, Ho Chi Minh City, Miami — they may sink beneath the water.

What can one person do on World Oceans Day

You don't need to dive to the bottom and collect plastic (although it is also an honor). Start small: refuse the plastic coffee cup. Carry a water bottle with you. Don't buy souvenirs made of shells and corals. Don't leave trash on the beach. Choose eco-labeled seafood. Sign a petition to ban single-use plastic. Tell children about the ocean, show them the movie "The Blue Planet" (2025). Perhaps in 20 years, your grandchildren will see live dolphins, not just in a museum.

Oceans and our health

The ocean gives us not only oxygen and food. Marine organisms are a source of medicines: from cancer, AIDS, inflammation. Deep-sea sponges, algae, bacteria — this is the pharmacy of the future. Polluting the ocean robs us of the chance for healing. On World Oceans Day, it is worth remembering this.

The future of oceans: what will happen in 30 years

If nothing changes, by 2050, oceans may turn into an acidic, warm, almost lifeless space. Jellyfish will take the place of fish. Corals will disappear. There will be more plastic than life. But there is hope: renewable energy, the abandonment of fossil fuels, reserves, cleaning technologies. World Oceans Day is not a show, but a plan of action. Each of us is part of the ocean. And we are responsible for it.

June 8 is not just a date on the calendar. It is an opportunity to breathe out and think about the blue heart of the planet. The ocean cannot scream. But it is dying. Don't let it choke in silence.


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World Oceans Day // New-York: Libmonster (LIBMONSTER.COM). Updated: 08.06.2026. URL: https://libmonster.com/m/articles/view/World-Oceans-Day (date of access: 10.06.2026).

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