Face-to-face with Ningaloo’s living miracles
Face-to-face with Ningaloo’s living miracles
“Places like Exmouth Gulf are vanishingly precious. They help keep our natural estate and our world heritage assets alive. They challenge and feed our scientific knowledge. And they help keep ordinary citizens sane. So, this development is an awful prospect, a disaster in the making.” See Tim Winton’s story in The Guardian and The Observer.
MORE LATEST NEWS & EVENTS
EPA releases Subsea 7’s latest controversial pipeline proposal
A controversial industrial pipeline fabrication and launch facility proposed for Exmouth Gulf, Ningaloo, has had its Public Environmental Review released for public comment. Read more here.
Senior Communication Adviser Job Opportunity
Our campaign is ramping up to an exciting new phase and we’re seeking a senior communications professional to rapidly build PN’s public profile. If you have exceptional digital and media skills, have senior experience, are passionate about conservation and want to help defend Ningaloo and Exmouth Gulf, this is a significant opportunity to do meaningful work and make a difference.
Sylvia Earle marks Ningaloo’s Nursery as a global Hope Spot
Sylvia Earle has been called ‘explorer-in-residence’ for National Geographic, a Living Legend by
the Library of Congress, ‘Her Deepness’ by The New Yorker and Hero for the Planet by Time. This week she has named Western Australia’s Ningaloo Reef and Exmouth Gulf as an international “Hope Spot” in a move that will boost its international profile and lend firepower to the campaign to save Ningaloo’s nursery from industrialisation.
Exmouth Gulf makes it to The New York Times
Blanche D’Anastasi from James Cook University has found that Exmouth Gulf is a global hotspot for sea snakes. A great story about a passionate young scientist making a difference and bringing the world’s attention to brand-new research.
Once in a generation report finds Exmouth Gulf has twice as many fish species as Ningaloo
The West Australian story reports on the Exmouth Gulf Review that finds a “staggering level of biodiversity in the Exmouth Gulf” including a rare pupping site for critically endangered green sawfish.
Scientists say Exmouth Gulf needs protection from industry
The ABC reports that sixteen scientists from the UWA’s Oceans Institute, James Cook University, Curtin University, Sharks and Rays Australia and Oceanwise Australia have contributed to a landmark report that uncovers Exmouth Gulf’s extraordinary biodiversity. It finds the Gulf is a globally important refuge for humpback whales, dugongs, rare dolphins and many endangered species. Endorsed by the IUCN, it recommends a major research effort and protection from industrial pressure.





