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Community Spotlight: Curaçao Dive Centers Unite in a Collective Effort to Tackle Marine Debris

Curacao dive centers join together to clean and protect
Community Actions

In this week’s Community Spotlight, we catch up with Bryan Horne, a member of the Dive Curaçao Task Force. Bryan explains how the south Carribean island is uniting together to clean up and take action. Dive centers here understand that conservation isn't done in isolation. It takes the collective efforts of the entire community.

 

Our ocean is under siege.  Everyday trash is entering the sea at an alarming rate. More than 250 million tons of plastic is estimated to make its way into our oceans by 2025.

The Curaçao Hospitality & Tourism Association’s (CHATA)  Dive Task Force is taking action against marine debris and taking ocean stewardship to a whole new level.  As members of the greater world community committed to the oceans, divers have the power and responsibility to act.

Marine debris is not only unsightly, but it's also dangerous to sea life, hazardous to human health, and costly to our economies. Marine animals become entangled in debris, and mistake it for food - often with fatal results. Divers, swimmers, and beach-goers can be directly harmed by encounters with marine debris or its toxins. The environmental damage caused by plastic debris alone is estimated at US$13 billion a year.

That’s why four of CHATA’s Dive Task Force members have committed to the Adopt a Dive Site™ initiative and adopted their house reefs, pledging to conduct monthly Dive Against Debris® beach & dive site clean ups.  Additionally, eight more Curaçao Dive Task Force Operators will be joining the movement soon.

Data about the debris collected during the monthly cleanups is submitted to Project AWARE as well as helping to create public awareness. 

 

As part of Curaçao’s commitment to Project AWARE’s flagship citizen-science program, Dive Against Debris, CHATA’s Dive Task Force is helping bridge the gap in knowledge through the Dive Against Debris Specialty Course and public outreach for a sustainable and a responsible Curaçao that will help inform and drive policy change.   Additionally, by harnessing the unique underwater skill set of the scuba diving community, Adopt a Dive Site empowers dive leaders around the globe to engage in ongoing, local protection of our underwater playgrounds.

Mile Mercera, Chief Executive Officer of CHATA  explains more:

“Our ocean and dive sites are an important component of our Tourism Product. It is a shared responsibility of the whole community to conserve and positively contribute to our natural resources, such as our ocean and dive sites for the benefit of our future generations. The commitment of the Dive Task Force to Dive Against Debris and Adopt a Dive Site is a major step towards the creation of awareness regarding the adverse effects of marine debris on the island and ultimately the conservation of our ocean. However, to create sustainable change, we need the commitment of the entire community; government, private sector and citizens alike to come together and support this great initiative by the CHATA Dive Task Force."

To date, The Dive Bus, CURious 2 Dive, Ocean Encounters Diving and Scuba Lodge Dive Center Pietermaai are all proud to announce that they have adopted their own dive sites with Project AWARE! 

If you’re a certified diver, join one of the CHATA Dive Task Force members for a free monthly Dive Against Debris cleanup here on Curaçao to collect/remove marine debris and report important data. Together, we are making a difference one dive at a time.

CHATA Dive Task Force


We Need Healthy Oceans, We Need a Healthy Curaçao, We Need You

Join a Project AWARE – Adopt A Dive Site Event on Curaçao

Our Oceans – Our Future – Our Responsibility

From the My Ocean Community

My Ocean is a growing community of conservation leaders. Together, our actions add up to global impact for our ocean planet.

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