How To Protect The Ocean

How To Protect The Ocean

byAndrew Lewin

ScienceNature

Dive into the Depths: Join Andrew Lewin on 'How to Protect the Ocean' – Your Gateway to Exclusive Ocean Insights! Explore the latest, uncharted realms of ocean science and conservation that you won't find anywhere else. Andrew takes you on an inspiring journey to uncover the hidden gems of oceanic discovery and initiatives. Tune in to discover how you can transform your life for a better ocean, one episode at a time. The How To Protect The Ocean is your resource to keep you informed on the latest ocean news; teach you how to speak up for the ocean; and, how yo...

Episodes(40 episodes)

Season 1 - Episode 1935
Why Good Ocean Science Still Doesn't Lead to Action
Ocean science can tell us what is happening to marine ecosystems, fisheries, climate impacts, and protected areas, but that information does not always reach the people who need it most. In this episode of How to Protect the Ocean, Andrew Lewin looks at the communication gap between researchers, policymakers, media, industry, and the public. The problem is not always a lack of science. Often, it is that the science moves slowly, social media moves instantly, and decision-makers do not always receive clear, accessible information in time to act. This episode explores why scientific papers can b...
Published: May 13, 2026Duration: 10m 33s
Season 1 - Episode 1934
Are Ocean Scientists Becoming Fundraisers Just to Survive?
Ocean conservation depends on science, but what happens when marine scientists spend more time chasing funding than doing the research itself? In this episode of How to Protect the Ocean, we look at the hidden financial pressure behind ocean conservation. Research vessels, field expeditions, monitoring programs, satellite tools, underwater robotics, staff, permits, and long-term analysis all cost money, and funding is becoming harder to secure. We also explore why communication is becoming essential for scientists and conservation organizations. Storytelling, public trust, media, podcasts, social media, and digital strategy are no longer side projects. They may b...
Published: May 12, 2026Duration: 10m 18s
Season 1 - Episode 1933
Why Saving the Ocean Still Runs Out of Money
Ocean conservation is a global effort worth billions, so why do so many marine scientists, nonprofits, and conservation groups still feel like they are constantly running out of money? In this episode of How to Protect the Ocean, Andrew Lewin breaks down why ocean conservation often operates grant to grant, donation to donation, and year to year. He explains how unstable funding affects marine protected areas, research, staffing, outreach, and long-term planning. The episode also explores why communication is becoming part of conservation infrastructure. In today's funding landscape, the organizations that can tell their story c...
Published: May 11, 2026Duration: 12m 15s
Season 1 - Episode 1932
Are We Paying to Damage the Ocean?
Bottom trawling is one of the most common fishing methods in the world, but what if it costs society more than it earns in profit? In this episode of How to Protect the Ocean, we look at a recent study on bottom trawling in Europe that found the total societal costs can be far higher than the profits generated, in some cases up to 90 times higher. Much of that hidden cost comes from carbon released when heavy fishing gear scrapes across the seafloor. Industrial fishing is not just about what ends up on your plate. I...
Published: May 8, 2026Duration: 8m 46s
Season 1 - Episode 1931
Can We Study the Ocean Without Harming It?
Ocean research helps us understand marine life, but what happens when the tools we use to study animals disturb the very creatures we are trying to protect? This episode looks at a powerful question in marine science: can we study the ocean without harming it? Whale sharks and other marine animals are often studied using tools like tags, drones, boats, and tracking technology. These methods can reveal migration routes, behavior, and conservation needs, but they also raise important ethical questions about disturbance, stress, and the responsibility scientists have when working around wildlife. Marine conservation is...
Published: May 7, 2026Duration: 9m 54s
Season 1 - Episode 1930
Are We Ignoring the Best Climate Solution We Already Have?
Blue carbon could be one of the most powerful climate solutions we already have, so why is it still missing from so many climate plans? In this episode of How to Protect the Ocean, we look at how mangroves, seagrasses, salt marshes, and other coastal ecosystems store carbon, protect coastlines, and support ocean health. Ocean climate solutions are often treated as secondary to land-based actions like planting trees, but coastal habitats can store carbon in sediments for long periods of time. The problem is that many countries still do not fully include blue carbon ecosystems in their...
Published: May 6, 2026Duration: 9m 52s
Season 1 - Episode 1929
Why Healthy Whales Are Suddenly Ending Up on Beaches
Whale strandings are heartbreaking, but what happens when the whales are not sick? In this episode of How to Protect the Ocean, we look at a recent mass pilot whale stranding in Scotland, where many of the animals appeared to be healthy before they ended up on shore. Pilot whales are highly social animals, which means one wrong turn can become a disaster for the entire pod. As prey shifts closer to shallow coastal waters, whales may follow their food into places where navigation becomes harder and the risk of stranding increases. Ocean change is...
Published: May 5, 2026Duration: 10m 29s
Season 1 - Episode 1928
Why Sea Cucumbers Matter More Than You Think
Sea Cucumbers are disappearing in parts of the ocean, and most people have no idea why that matters. These strange, soft-bodied animals might not look important, but they play a critical role in keeping marine ecosystems healthy and functioning. Ocean Ecosystems rely on sea cucumbers to recycle nutrients, clean sediments, and support the balance of life on the seafloor. When they are removed through overfishing, the consequences can ripple across entire habitats, affecting biodiversity and long-term ocean health. Overfishing Impacts are often hidden from public view, especially when they involve species people rarely think about...
Published: May 4, 2026Duration: 9m 37s
Season 1 - Episode 1927
The Ocean Agency You've Never Heard Of, But Depend On Every Day
NOAA affects your daily life more than you think, from the weather forecasts you check to the seafood you eat, yet most people have no idea how important it really is. In this episode, we break down what NOAA actually does, why it matters for your safety, food, and environment, and what could happen if funding cuts weaken its ability to operate. Ocean science plays a critical role in predicting hurricanes, managing fisheries, protecting marine wildlife, and understanding climate patterns like El Niño and La Niña. But when programs are cut or overlooked, the consequences ri...
Published: May 1, 2026Duration: 59m 17s
Season 1 - Episode 1926
Why Ocean Exploration Could Matter to Your Future More Than You Think
Ocean exploration may sound like a niche science topic, but it affects far more than research ships and submarines. If most of the ocean remains poorly mapped and rarely observed, how can we protect habitats, predict hazards, discover new species, or understand climate change? In this episode, we break down why exploring the ocean still matters right now. NOAA ocean science plays a major role in uncovering what happens below the surface. From mapping the seafloor to discovering deep-sea ecosystems and tracking changing ocean conditions, exploration gives us the information needed to make better decisions for people...
Published: Apr 30, 2026Duration: 10m 5s
Season 1 - Episode 1925
What Does NOAA Have to Do With Saving Marine Wildlife?
NOAA marine wildlife protection affects whales, sea turtles, dolphins, seals, and endangered ocean species in ways most people never see. In this episode, we break down how one agency helps prevent extinctions, protects habitats, responds to strandings, and enforces laws that keep marine wildlife alive. Ocean conservation is not only about beach cleanups or personal choices. It also depends on science, rescue teams, habitat monitoring, fisheries rules, and long-term public systems. If those systems weaken, marine wildlife can pay the price. Marine biology listeners will learn why protecting species requires more than passion, and why...
Published: Apr 29, 2026Duration: 10m 40s
Season 1 - Episode 1924
Why Your Seafood Depends on NOAA More Than You Think
NOAA seafood safety affects more than most people realize. The seafood in your grocery store or on your restaurant plate may rely on NOAA science, inspections, fisheries data, and monitoring systems that help keep oceans productive and supply chains accountable. In this episode, we break down why this often-overlooked agency matters to everyday consumers. Seafood traceability is not just about labels. It is about knowing where fish comes from, whether it was caught legally, and whether marine ecosystems are being managed responsibly. If those systems weaken, consumers, honest fishers, and ocean wildlife all feel the impact. <...
Published: Apr 28, 2026Duration: 9m 51s
Season 1 - Episode 1923
What Happens If Weather Warnings Start Failing?
NOAA helps protect millions of people before hurricanes, floods, tornadoes, and tsunamis hit, but most people never realize how much they rely on it. In this episode, we break down the hidden systems behind weather forecasting, emergency alerts, and disaster preparedness, and why cuts to NOAA could have consequences far beyond the ocean. Natural Disasters are becoming more intense in many regions, which makes accurate forecasting more important than ever. Better models, satellites, buoys, and warning systems give families more time to evacuate, secure homes, and stay safe. If those systems weaken, mistakes become more costly. <...
Published: Apr 27, 2026Duration: 8m 44s
Season 1 - Episode 1922
Who Decides What Happens to the Ocean?
Who really controls the future of the ocean, and why does progress so often feel slow? In this episode, Andrew speaks with Sarah Federman about the hidden systems behind environmental harm, corporate accountability, and why everyday people are often left carrying decisions they never made. You'll learn why protecting the ocean is bigger than personal choices, how public pressure can create tipping points for change, and why collective action helps turn frustration into momentum. This conversation connects history, business, and conservation in a way that changes how you see ocean protection. If you've ever felt...
Published: Apr 24, 2026Duration: 1h 9m 54s
Season 1 - Episode 1921
What Actually Forces Companies to Protect the Ocean?
Published: Apr 23, 2026Duration: 12m 25s
Season 1 - Episode 1920
We Protected the Ocean, So Why Are We Going Backwards?
Ocean Conservation felt like it was moving forward, so why does it suddenly feel like everything is being undone? In this episode, Andrew Lewin breaks down why environmental progress rarely happens in a straight line, and why setbacks do not always mean failure. If you have felt discouraged by policy rollbacks, delayed protections, or repeated fights over the same issues, this episode is for you. Marine Protection often moves in waves. History shows that accountability rises, falls, and rises again. Andrew explores why political shifts can reverse gains, how public pressure still matters, and why today's losses...
Published: Apr 22, 2026Duration: 11m 10s
Season 1 - Episode 1919
Why You Feel Guilty About Problems You Didn't Create
Why do simple choices like buying groceries, using plastic, or ordering dinner feel so loaded? In this episode of How to Protect the Ocean, we unpack the hidden systems that push environmental responsibility onto consumers instead of solving problems where they start. If you've ever felt guilty trying to "do the right thing," this episode is for you. Consumer choices matter, but they were never meant to carry the full weight of ocean conservation, climate action, or ethical supply chains. We explore seafood sourcing, AI data centers, plastic waste, and why corporations often benefit when responsibility gets...
Published: Apr 21, 2026Duration: 10m 36s
Season 1 - Episode 1918
The System That Makes Ocean Problems Feel Like Your Fault
Caring about the ocean should feel meaningful, so why does it often feel exhausting instead? In this episode, we unpack why so many people experience eco-anxiety, ocean overwhelm, and the sense that nothing they do matters.   You'll learn why "do your part" messaging can backfire when collective problems are treated like personal failures. More importantly, you'll hear what research and real-world experience show actually helps: community, collective action, and finding people who care alongside you.   If you've ever felt stuck, discouraged, or emotionally drained by environmental news, this episode offers a be...
Published: Apr 20, 2026Duration: 12m 58s
Season 1 - Episode 1917
What Happens in Antarctica Affects You More Than You Think
Antarctica may feel distant, frozen, and disconnected from everyday life, but what happens there can shape sea level rise, ocean circulation, climate systems, and the future health of marine ecosystems around the world. In this episode of How to Protect the Ocean, part of the Surfacing Secrets: Explore the Ocean, Know the Planet series with Ocean Networks Canada, we go behind the scenes of an international mission to install real-time ocean monitoring systems in one of the hardest places on Earth to study. Joining me are Juanjo Canales, a marine scientist from Spain with decades of experience i...
Published: Apr 17, 2026Duration: 1h 1m 5s
Season 1 - Episode 1916
The Hidden Risk Behind Melting Glaciers
Antarctic glaciers are melting, but the real story is not just about ice disappearing. It is about what happens next, and how fast those changes can impact sea levels, coastlines, and ecosystems around the world. Glacier collapse is not a slow, steady process. In some cases, it can happen rapidly, triggered by warming oceans, weakening ice shelves, and shifting climate patterns. Scientists are now racing to understand how unstable these systems really are and what it means for the future. In this episode, we break down how glaciers work, why Antarctica matters more than most...
Published: Apr 16, 2026Duration: 10m 41s