After two weeks of negotiations between more than 50 countries, the Fifth Session of the Intergovernmental Conference (IGC) ended last Friday without establishing a High Seas Treaty — once again leaving more than two-thirds of the global ocean unprotected. But important progress was also made, which the Only One community of supporters has helped push for. World leaders are closer than ever before to finalizing the treaty, and there’s reason to be optimistic that the next negotiation will be the last step in the nearly two-decades–long process. We can’t let up the pressure now, and we need you with us! Can you help build momentum for the coalition to protect the High Seas by sharing our petition with your network? We’re just shy of our goal of 75,000 signatures.
This November, world leaders will decide whether to give these iconic species the highest level of protection under CITES — and we need your voice to make it happen.
Whale sharks, oceanic whitetip sharks, and manta and devil rays — some of our planet’s most iconic species and pillars of conservation — are vanishing. Over the past few decades alone, shark and ray populations have declined at an alarming rate. Whale shark numbers have dropped by more than 50%. Oceanic whitetip sharks have declined by 80–90% and are now critically endangered, while manta and devil ray populations have plummeted by as much as 99% in some regions.
The biggest culprit for their decline is the unsustainable international trade of their fins and gill plates, exacerbated by climate change–fueled habitat loss and ecosystem destruction.

















