Skip to content
Environment

EMBARGO: Historic Ocean Treaty kicks in as Australia warned: “no time to waste”

Greenpeace Australia Pacific 3 mins read

EMBARGO: 00:01 AEST Saturday 17 January 2026


BRISBANE, Saturday 17 January 2026 — As one of the most significant nature protection agreements in history, the Global Ocean Treaty, comes into force today, Greenpeace Australia Pacific says there’s no time to waste for Australia to pass the legislation and start protecting the high seas.

The Global Ocean Treaty, the most significant piece of environmental legislation since the Paris Agreement, is the foundation that will enable governments to propose and establish world-first high-seas ocean sanctuaries, where millions of species and underwater wonderlands can rest, thrive, and recover. It legally enters into force today, after two decades of global campaigning.

It comes as Greenpeace Australia Pacific unveiled a major street mural in New Farm, Brisbane, celebrating the treaty’s introduction as part of a Greenpeace global mural campaign, with artworks being unveiled in 13 countries across five continents. The global action also marks the beginning of a crucial countdown to protect 30% of the world’s ocean by 2030.

Elle Lawless, senior nature campaigner at Greenpeace Australia Pacific, said: “Today, the ocean can breathe a sigh of relief – this treaty coming into force marks the beginning of widespread high seas protection. To date, the management of our ocean has been fragmented; there is now a legal global framework that enables countries to create marine sanctuaries in the high seas. Robust ocean sanctuaries can help save the ocean, which is struggling under the pressure of global heating, pollution and industrial fishing.”

Australia signed the Global Ocean Treaty (also known as the High Seas Biodiversity Treaty or the ‘BBNJ’ Agreement) in 2023, but has yet to ratify it. When it does, Australia will be able to propose high seas marine sanctuaries at the first-ever Oceans Conference of the Parties (COP1) later this year. 

“This is a historic turning point, but there’s no time to waste. Every day that passes, the ocean suffers at the hands and hooks of industrial fishing. The Australian government has already shown domestic leadership with Marine Protected Areas close to shore – now it’s time to get on with legislating the treaty and proposing high seas sanctuaries, including in the Tasman Sea,” Lawless said.

“At the first-ever Oceans COP, governments must act with ambition, urgency and science to turn this landmark agreement into thriving ocean sanctuaries that protect marine life and our shared future. Crucially, this means ensuring these high seas sanctuaries are fully and highly protected against industrial fishing corporations that pillage and profit from these special places. There can be no room for industrial fisheries influence in the design of these sanctuaries. Australia must ratify now for a seat at the table, and champion legitimate, strong protections.”


The Pacific is already leading the charge, with Tuvalu, Vanuatu, Fiji, the Solomon Islands, Palau, the Federated States of Micronesia and Kiribati having ratified the treaty.

Currently, less than 1% of the high seas are highly or fully protected. Closing the High Seas protection gap from under 1% to 30% in four years, to meet the globally-agreed 30x30 target, will require governments to protect ocean areas larger than entire continents and to do so faster than any conservation effort in history.

—ENDS—

Notes to Editor:

 

Elle Lawless will be available for interviews in front of the mural on the corner of Brunswick and Barker Streets, at the New Farm Cinema in Brisbane, between 9:00am – 10:00am (Brisbane time) on Saturday, 17 January.

 

  • High res images and footage of Australia’s oceans can be found here

  • Images of the mural at the New Farm Cinema, Brisbane, can be found here on Saturday

  • Photographs of the global murals will be available here from Saturday as the murals are finished, with full library of pictures uploaded in the following days.

  • The full list of countries participating are: Slovenia, Austria, the Philippines, Mexico, Mauritius, Senegal, Germany, Australia, the UK, Japan, Canada, the Netherlands, and the USA.
  • A short history of the Ocean Treaty 

  • Bios about the artists


Contact details:

For more information or to arrange an interview, please contact Kimberley Bernard on +61 407 581 404 or kbernard@greenpeace.org

or Elle Lawless on Saturday on +61438 031 010

Media

More from this category

  • Environment
  • 27/02/2026
  • 09:36
REMONDIS AUSTRALIA

REMONDIS Australia expands medical waste services with acquisition of VetraHealth

REMONDIS Australia expands medical and clinical waste services with VetraHealth acquisition Brisbane Qld, 27 February 2026, REMONDIS Australia – REMONDIS Australia has continued expanding…

  • Contains:
  • Environment
  • 26/02/2026
  • 13:41
Greenpeace Australia Pacific

Pacific nations would be paid only thousands for deep sea mining, while mining companies set to make billions, new research reveals

SYDNEY/FIJI, Thursday 26 February 2026 — New independent research commissioned by Greenpeace International has revealed that Pacific Island states would receive mere thousands of dollars in payment from deep sea mining per year, placing the region as one of the most affected but worst-off beneficiaries in the world.The researchby legal professorDr Harvey Mpoto Bombaka and development economist Dr Ben Tippet reveals that mechanisms proposed by the International Seabed Authority (ISA) for sharing any future revenues from deep sea mining would leave developing nations with meagre, token payments. Pacific Island nations would receive only USD $46,000 per year in the short…

  • Contains:
  • Environment, Property Real Estate
  • 26/02/2026
  • 09:15
Renew

Record Interest Expected for Australians Opening Homes to Cut Energy Bills and Improve Climate Resilience

Record Interest Expected for Australians Opening Homes to Cut Energy Bills and Improve Climate Resilience Thursday 26 February 2026: Australian households are leading one of the fastest clean energy transformations in the world, installing rooftop solar, embracing home batteries and upgrading for resilience, and this May, many will open their doors to show others how it’s done. On Sunday 17 May 2026, Sustainable House Day (SHD) returns, inviting homeowners and renters across the country to open their doors and showcase practical solutions that make homes more comfortable, affordable and climate-ready. Hosted by not-for-profit organisation Renew, Sustainable House Day is Australia’s…

Media Outreach made fast, easy, simple.

Feature your press release on Medianet's News Hub every time you distribute with Medianet. Pay per release or save with a subscription.