Giacomo Abrusci with trash bags after a beach cleanup

The Environmental Movement Is Under Attack And We Must Organize Now

The environmental movement is under attack. The slow, painstaking work of conservation, decades of research, legal protections, and fragile ecosystem recovery, is being undone at an alarming rate. Agencies that exist to safeguard our air, water, ocean, and biodiversity, such as the EPA and NOAA in the USA, are facing cuts and restructuring that threaten their very ability to function, perhaps even to exist. Regulations protecting fragile ecosystems are being rolled back. Policies designed to mitigate the worst impacts of climate change are being abandoned. In many cases, the losses are not just setbacks of months or years of work; they are irreversible.

When a single environmental protection is repealed, we don’t just lose research or funding. We lose entire ecosystems, species, and biodiversity that have taken thousands of years to evolve and stabilize. We lose forests that have stored carbon for centuries. We lose coral reefs that took millennia to build. We lose species we haven’t even discovered yet. We lose the opportunity to understand, protect, and restore life on this planet because once destruction happens, recovery is not always possible.

I was distracting myself by flipping through Instagram reels last night and stumbled on Jane Fonda’s Life Achievement Award acceptance speech. She asked, “Have any of you ever watched a documentary of one of the great social movements, like apartheid or our civil rights movement or Stonewall, and asked yourself, would you have been brave enough to walk the bridge? Would you have been able to take the hoses and the batons and the dogs?” She followed with, “We don’t have to wonder anymore because we are in our documentary moment. This is it. And it’s not a rehearsal. We mustn’t for a moment kid ourselves about what’s happening. This is big-time serious, folks. So let’s be brave.” [YouTube link of entire 8 min speech. Quote above at 7:06]

Then I felt the weight in my gut. And I felt it still this morning. I felt guilty, I promised to excuse myself from further activism for my own mental health. I dedicated my entire career and bankrupted myself on an attempt to save our ocean, biodiversity, the hope for humanity. Knowing that no matter how much I do, it will never be enough. 

But I am also reminded of something important: SEVENSEAS Media exists. At the very least, I have built this. I know that SEVENSEAS is an incredible and vital tool in the environmental movement. It’s not just about the ocean; it’s about connection. We are organizing without even realizing we are organizing. We are creating a global community where knowledge is shared freely, where environmental professionals, students, activists, and organizations across nations, cultures, and languages can support one another.

We cannot rely solely on governments or institutions to protect what we love. The environmental movement has always been about people- individuals and communities working together. SEVENSEAS is part of that solution. We now have over 36,000 subscribers to our weekly newsletter, making us larger and stronger than ever.

I ask everyone reading this: Use this platform. Share your needs. Offer your resources. Publish opportunities. Use SEVENSEAS to connect and organize, and make sure others in our movement are aware. Even if someone subscribes and doesn’t read our emails today, they may need that connection tomorrow. We are in a moment of crisis, and it will likely get worse, but we are not alone. Let’s be brave. Let’s stand together. Let’s keep fighting.

Giacomo Abrusci, Founder & Executive Director

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