Name
Clean Sea Life
country
Italy
Goal
The aim of the Clean Sea LIFE project is to reverse the accumulation of marine litter along Italian coasts by raising awareness of the issue, inspiring changes in attitude in citizens, encouraging co-responsibility and disseminating good management practices among tourism operators and authorities. The awareness campaign aims at a concrete and short-term goal – recovering quantities of marine litter – and a long-term goal, which is to induce all sea lovers to get actively involved in the protection of the sea during their activities.
Main Topic
Biodiversity: preserving and restoring ecosystems and biodiversity
All Topics
Biodiversity: preserving and restoring ecosystems and biodiversity
Increasing the EU's climate policy ambition for 2030 and 2050
Zero pollution ambition for a toxic-free environment
Scale
  • Regional (e.g. a province, including multiple cities)
  • National
Actors
  • Community-based initiative (i.e. citizens, cooperative, neighbourhood group)
  • Non-profit organisation (i.e. pursues a particular social cause, e.g. schools, foundations, social movement)
  • Local government
  • National government
Main Activity
Raising awareness and/or political agenda-setting;
Activities
  • Providing knowledge transfer / advisory / education services
  • Raising awareness and/or political agenda-setting
  • Facilitating dialogue and networking
  • Designing policies and/or (management) strategies
Source
This initiative was provided by the SGD consortium.
This initiative is self-reported and not identified by the SHARED GREEN DEAL Consortium
Go back to main list of initiatives
Logo

CONTACT

For further details please contact co-leads Dr Chris Foulds (chris.foulds@aru.ac.uk) and Dr Rosie Robison (rosie.robison@aru.ac.uk).

EU Logo

This project has received funding from the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation program under grant agreement No 101036640. The sole responsibility for the content of this website lies with the SHARED GREEN DEAL HAS project and does not necessarily reflect the opinion of the European Union.