News

For North Atlantic right whale mothers, the journey to parenthood begins with a long wait. Females become sexually mature around age eight or nine and carry a single calf for about 12 to 13 months.
Canada’s federal election on April 28, 2025, is quickly approaching. Now is the time to vote for the ocean and for the future you want. From overfishing and habitat loss to climate change and plastic ...
Halifax, Mi’kma’ki, traditional, unceded territory of the Mi’kmaq People: Over the past week, Fisheries and Oceans Canada (DFO) met with representatives from the fishing industry, Indigenous rights ...
Canada is a top global seafood exporter but relies heavily on only a few key species (snow crab, lobster, shrimp, and salmon) while most of the seafood Canadians eat is imported. Lacking diversity in ...
Today, the Canadian government announced it will continue existing measures to protect critically endangered North Atlantic right whales. Oceana Canada welcomes this commitment but warns that the ...
As record breaking snowstorms sweep through Canada, a different kind of snowfall is happening beneath the waves—marine snow. Unlike the frosty flakes outside your window, this mesmerizing drift of ...
Oceana Canada is working with stadiums, beverage companies, and governments to make the FIFA World Cup 2026 in Canada the greenest games yet. Ditching the landfill-bound, single-use cups for ones that ...
Oceana Canada is working with stadiums, beverage companies, and governments to make the FIFA World Cup 2026 in Canada the greenest games yet. Ditching the landfill-bound, single-use cups for ones that ...
Oceana Canada is working with stadiums, beverage companies, and governments to make the FIFA World Cup 2026 in Canada the greenest games yet. Ditching the landfill-bound, single-use cups for ones that ...
Oceana Canada is working with stadiums, beverage companies, and governments to make the FIFA World Cup 2026 in Canada the greenest games yet. Ditching the landfill-bound, single-use cups for ones that ...
Media contacts: Oceana U.S.: Erin Vande Ven, [email protected], 303.829.3877 Oceana Canada: Vaishali Dassani, [email protected], 647.294.3335 The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration ...
Now that we are in the giving season, let’s spotlight some of the most underrated gift givers in the ocean! Every living thing benefits from the gifts of the ocean because we are all connected. From ...