Over two hundred events around the world will mark World Ocean Day on 8th June. From #swimfortheocean in Lima to beach clean-ups in Gabon. Its 30x30 campaign seeks to get world leaders to agree to protect at least 30% of the oceans by 2030. To do this, the project is calling for the much-needed creation of Marine Protected Areas, which would act like national parks on land, and curb the excesses of humanity in the water.
To say this is necessary is an understatement, the ocean covers 70% of the planet, the world’s oceans produce 50% of oxygen and is the main source of protein for more than a billion people worldwide. And yet despite its vital role in our survival, over 90% of its fish populations have shrunk, and 50% of its coral reefs.
At Orlebar Brown we are proud to support World Ocean Day and to mark it, we spoke to 38-year-old Manila-based photographer Noel Guevara. Few others have brought such close attention to the problems – and indeed the wonders – beneath the waves. His photographs frequently go viral and with good cause.
Here, he chooses four of his favourites which showcase what life is really like in our oceans.
CABAN COVE, MARICABAN ISLAND, VERDE ISLAND PASSAGE (ABOVE)
“I took this on assignment with Greenpeace back in 2019 and it has to be my most famous photo. I was doing a visual audit underwater in the centre of the Coral Triangle. People discover new ocean species there every day. We wanted to contrast that with how much plastic was also there. At the end of the day, when I was just leaving, I saw this cup floating and started taking photos of it. The next thing I knew, there was a crab inside it. I knew it would be an iconic shot, at least for the campaign. What I didn't know was that it would explode virally all over the world. It was picked up by the BBC, CNN, and National Geographic and it was on the front pages of broadsheets in Milan and France. The plastic cup is from a brand based in the Philippines and served pretty much everywhere; it goes to show how much single-use plastic ends up in our oceans.”