“Let The Ocean Breathe” Conservation & Education Programme

Safeguarding Ocean and Air

Practicing Preserves Life Below Water SDG14. Taking action to address global warming, leaping into the glacial lakes of Xinjiang Tianshan Glacier meltwater, creating an ā€œocean on landā€, building sustainable fisheries where “furthest from the ocean” as conserving and sustainably use the oceans, seas and marine resources. Green transition promotes a green economy, alleviating the burden on the ocean, helping increase incomes for local residents, accelerating rural revitalization.

I love doing something to help nature and society, not just for now, but also for future.

– W.L. Hung, CEO

Integration of Glacier, Land, Ocean

Safeguard the last piece of pure land on the Earth, Let the Glacier Cool, Let the Ocean Breathe, run through the pulse to Urban Wildlife Corridor, draw a Green-blueprint – integration of glacier, land, ocean, promote green development, nurture biodiversity, promote the sustainability of humans and nature

ā€œLet The Ocean Breatheā€ advocates:

  1. ā€œSustainable Fisheriesā€ Preserves Life Below Water SDG14, Safeguarding Ocean and Air
  2. Ocean is a Vital Contributor to Air (Oxygen) and Biodiversity
  3. ā€œGreen-blueprint: Integration of Glacier, Land, Oceanā€ Addressing the Climate Crisis and Poverty
  4. ā€œIntegration of Humans, Society, Economy and Nature ā€ Moving the World Towards a Bright Future of Sustainable Development
  5. “Two-Places Integration” Activity Promoting Conservation, Education, Science Outreach, and Cultural Exchange
  6. Green Economy, Green Financing (Climate Finance), Green Transition, and Clean Energy Reduce Carbon Emissions and Mitigate Global Warming
  7. Orderly Promotion of Green Development to Build a Livable Planet, Practice the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) and the 1.5 Climate Goals
  8. The ā€œBelt and Road Initiativeā€ Cooperates with Developing Countries, Especially in Green Energy Industry, Agricultural Production Capacity, and Ecological Construction
  9. The United Nations (UN) Paris Agreement, Convention on Biological Diversity, Convention to Combat Desertification, Framework Convention on Climate Change, Water Action Agenda, Decade of Action for Cryospheric Sciences, Kunming-Montreal Global Biodiversity Framework
  10. The United Nations (UN) 2025 International Year of Glaciers’ Preservation, World Day for Glaciers 21 March, World Water Day 22 March, World Bee Day 20 May, World Oceans Day 8 June

“Let The Ocean Breathe” Safeguards Ocean and Air

For some people who especially live in the cities, it is hard for them to understand the value of nature such as glaciers, land, oceans, wildlife animals, insects, plants, rivers, forests, and beautiful nature landscapes etc. The fact is that nature supports our society, economy, life and future, including nurturing the most important elements of human life – Water, Food and Air. We shouldn’t consider that nature is free, and often take it for granted and overexploit it.

Human survival is inseparable from water, food and air. Glaciers conserve clean freshwater resources, and water nourishes land with rich nutrients; Water, rich in nutrients, flows to land along ā€œUrban Wildlife Corridorā€, nurturing food and biodiversity. Water then follows rivers and merges into oceans to ā€œLet the Ocean Breatheā€. Oceans exhale oxygen, and absorb the greenhouse gas carbon dioxide to ā€œLet the Glacier Coolā€; Glaciers maintain a balance of accumulation and ablation, stabilize the planet’s temperatures, enable sustainable water resources. This recurring force of nature ultimately allows the health, peace and prosperity of humans and nature to develop sustainably.

The ā€œIntegration of Glacier, Land, Oceanā€, taking a ā€œAs a wholeā€ approach to take care of the Earth and ā€œLet the Earth Cool”. By protecting the glaciers, we protect the land; by protecting the land, we protect the oceans; by protecting the oceans, we protect the glaciers. Nature and humans are closely linked, influencing and relying on each other.

The United Nations Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change’s (IPCC) special report on global warming shows that once global temperatures rise by more than 2°C above pre-industrial levels, we will lose the vast majority of coral reefs on the planet. Meanwhile, the World Meteorological Organization warns us that on current trends in CO2 emissions, temperatures will rise between 3°C and 5°C by the end of the century. In other words, if current trends in greenhouse gas emissions continue, coral extinctions will double.

In view of this, the United Nations General Assembly launched the UN Decade of Ocean Science for Sustainable Development (2021-2030) (ā€˜the Ocean Decade’) seeks to stimulate ocean science and knowledge generation to reverse the decline of the state of the ocean system and catalyse new opportunities for sustainable development of this massive marine ecosystem. The United Nations also designated June 8 every year as ā€œWorld Oceans Dayā€ in the hope of awakening the public to jointly protect the oceans. The ocean covers more than 70% of the Earth and supports the life of humans and every living thing on the Earth. However, nearly 90% of the large fish in the ocean have disappeared, and nearly 50% of the coral reefs have been destroyed. Humans extract far more from the ocean than they actually need, and more than the forces of nature can repair themselves. In line with the vision of the international community, Will Legend hopes to create a healthy and resilient ocean through sustainable fisheries to achieve a harmonious coexistence between humans and nature.

ā€œLet The Ocean Breatheā€ Conservation & Education Programme

The ā€œGreen-blueprintā€ advocates the philosophy of ā€œIntegration of Glacier, Land, Oceanā€ to take action to address the climate crisis and poverty, and drive humanity towards a bright future of sustainable development.

Due to the fact that glaciers, land, and oceans have always been less well-known by the outside world, they are considered to be just a geographical division and name, so that the public ignores their absolute importance to the survival of humans and organisms. The ā€œGreen-blueprint – Glacier and Water, Land and Food, Ocean and Airā€ represent the conservation and education programmes of ā€œLet the Glacier Cool, Urban Wildlife Corridor, and Let the Ocean Breatheā€ respectively, and are closely linked to the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) and Climate Goals. The purpose is to inspire people to live in balance with nature and fundamentally protect the most important elements of human life – water, food and air.

In 2008, the United Nations established World Oceans Day. In 2009, the UN inaugurated World Oceans Day with the theme “Our Ocean, Our Responsibility.” Then-UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon said, “This inaugural World Oceans Day allows us to highlight the ocean’s many contributions to society. It also provides an opportunity to recognize the enormous challenges we face in maintaining its ability to regulate the global climate, provide essential ecosystem services, and enable sustainable livelihoods and safe recreation.”

The ocean is Earth’s largest resource trove, containing approximately 80% of its biomass and 200,000 species of marine life. It is also rich in oil and gas resources, accounting for approximately 45% of the world’s total. It also possesses mineral and energy resources such as polymetallic nodules, cobalt-rich crusts, rare earth metals, and methane hydrate. Furthermore, the ocean provides a variety of clean energy sources, including offshore wind power, tidal power, wave power, and thermal energy. Many human economic activities, including marine fisheries, maritime transportation, shipbuilding, marine energy, and marine tourism, rely on the ocean. Peter Thomson, the UN Secretary-General’s Special Envoy for the Ocean, stated, “Analysis suggests that by 2050, the amount of plastic in the ocean will outnumber the amount of fish. This necessitates action to prevent plastic pollution. Furthermore, according to the UN Food and Agriculture Organization, global overfishing currently accounts for 34% of the fish catch. This requires us to combat illegal fishing and manage vessels effectively.”

Green Economy, Environment-Society, Green (Eco) Living. On June 8, 2022, Will Legend founded the ā€œLet The Ocean Breatheā€ Conservation and Education Programme and became the founding organization. The ocean covers over 70% of the Earth, supporting human life and every living thing on Earth. It exhales at least 50% of the Earth’s oxygen and absorbs approximately 40% of its carbon dioxide, mitigating the effects of climate change. Given the vastness of the ocean, past conservation efforts have either been broadly framed as “protecting the ocean” or focused on protecting individual marine species. However, implementation has proven elusive. While raising public awareness is crucial, it’s often difficult to get people up close, to see, and touch. With this in mind, the “Let the Ocean Breathe” uses three key elements: The Ocean Crossing Journey of Small Algae & Big Whale, Jointly Promoting Ocean Preservation Initiatives with National Agencies, Visit to the Tianshan Glacial Lake (Ocean on Land) to Explore Sustainable Fisheries. Ultimately, we aim to simultaneously implement philosophy and practices, collaborating with scientists, representatives of enterprises and organizations, teachers, students, and the public to promote a sustainable future for humanity and nature.

The Ocean Crossing Journey of Small Algae & Big Whale

Every second of oxygen we breathe comes from the ocean. The story begins with a whale diving to the deep ocean to feed and returning to the surface to breathe. Whales use their vertical movement to bring minerals to the surface, a practice known as the “whale pump”. Large whales periodically migrate to different ocean regions to feed and reproduce, a process known as the “whale conveyor belt”. On each journey, they always bring their good friends—small algae, or more precisely, microalgae (phytoplankton). It turns out that whale excrement contains vital nutrients for phytoplankton growth, such as iron and nitrogen. This is how small algae collaborate with larger whales to produce oxygen for the atmosphere. Will Legend advocates for a public effort to stop over-consuming marine resources. Instead, we should address the source by protecting phytoplankton, which absorbs carbon dioxide from the atmosphere and releases oxygen. At the same time, people should fundamentally learn to protect the environment by reducing carbon emissions, avoiding overfishing, and reducing ocean pollution, allowing the ocean to breathe.

Jointly Promoting Ocean Preservation Initiatives with National Body

On January 28, 2024, Will legend was honored to visit the Administration of the Guangdong Nanpeng Islands National Marine Reserve and received support from the Management Bureau for a joint initiative to protect the marine biodiversity including within the nature reserve (the Chinese white dolphin, finless porpoise, coral, and other rare and protected species). The Guangdong Nanpeng Islands National Nature Reserve covers a total area of 35,679 hectares. It is located southeast of Nan’ao Island, at the confluence of Guangdong, Fujian, and Taiwan provinces, the East China Sea, and the South China Sea. It lies close to the Tropic of Cancer and lies in the tropical to subtropical transition zone. It boasts distinct geographical advantages, unique hydrological and climatic conditions, unique submarine topography, and rich biodiversity. Listed as a Wetland of International Importance in 2015, it is known as ā€œA Typical Treasure Trove of Marine Biological Resources in the South China Seaā€ and ā€œA Living Natural Museum in the Northern Part of the South China Seaā€. It features a marine ecology exhibition hall, a migratory bird nature reserve, and an island national forest park. The reserve is home to 1,308 species of marine life, including 314 marine vertebrates. Seventeen species of animals are listed as national Class I and Class II protected species, as well as eight species under Guangdong Provincial Key Protection. It is also a migratory and habitat for numerous rare and protected aquatic wildlife, including the Chinese white dolphin, finless porpoise, nautilus, sea turtles, yellow croaker, seahorse, staghorn coral, and Montipora coral.

Tianshan Glacial Lake (Ocean on Land) – Sustainable Fisheries

On July 29, 2025, Will Legend further connected with government officials and green businesses in Nileke County, Yili Prefecture, Xinjiang, to show the public – Xinjiang, the province farthest from the ocean, and learn how to make full use of glaciers, cultivate the ocean on land, and nurture ā€œseafoodā€. The local government and green enterprise are demonstrating how they are leveraging natural resources to practice sustainable fisheries, accelerate rural development, and promote rural revitalization. Incorporating sustainable development elements into the aquaculture process is a crucial step in implementing ocean protection. This initiative promotes the conservation and sustainable use of the oceans and marine resources, fulfills the United Nations Sustainable Development Goal for Life Below Water (SDG14) and the 1.5 Climate Goals, and contributes to building a livable planet. The ocean on land welcomes the gift of nature. In 2014, the first batch of high-quality triploid rainbow trout eyed eggs were transported from North America, Denmark and other places to the salmon base in Kalasu Township, Nileke County, Yili, Xinjiang. The waters in the world where this fish can be cultivated are rare, and the glacier snowmelt water from the Tianshan Mountains in Xinjiang is known as ā€œholy waterā€. In cold water at about 8°C, the eggs are carefully cared for 60 days and hatched into fry. After another 4-6 months, the young fish finally enter the breeding cages.

ā€œThe Legend of Willā€ Chapter 2: Willy Bee and Flowery Across the Ocean (Ocean and Air)

“Respect the ocean and protect it.” Wind carries the message of nature

In order to avoid the toxic substances in the air, Willy Bee Tashi and Flowery Delek muster up their courage, take a deep breath and immediately dive into the blue ocean. Then a pink and white halo slowly swims towards them.

“I am the ‘sea spirit’ that connects the land and the ocean. Glacier, land and ocean are originally integrated. Because of human demands and pollution, nature can no longer repair itself. This is how the climate crisis begins to emerge and extreme weather occurs frequently.” White Dolphin said

“If the situation continues, eventually all glaciers will be melt and fresh water will become hard to find. Marine life and phytoplankton will become extinct, causing the Earth to be filled with greenhouse gas carbon dioxide, and humans will no longer be able to breathe clean air. The land will be polluted to the point where food can no longer be grown, and forests will disappear, causing life to become extinct.” Big Whale said

“I know that Willy Bee is the messenger of nature. Can you and Flowery bring the ‘Green-blueprint’ and work together with my two friends, Small Algae and Big Whale, to use the power number 608 to decode the ‘Air’ seed of life?” White Dolphin said

“Every second of oxygen humans breathe comes from the ocean! The ocean is a natural carbon sink, absorbing greenhouse gases produced by human activities and protecting biodiversity. Big Whale and I will protect you all the way to the Third Pole, absorbing excess heat and greenhouse gas carbon dioxide for you along the way, and delivering oxygen for you to breathe.” Small Algae said

“You need to drive the human world to protect the ocean, reduce marine pollution, and moderately take marine resources to promote sustainable development, to Let the Ocean Breathe.” Small Algae said

ā€œWhen the time comes, the gods of the sun and wind will create new energy and release clean energy back to the Earth, mitigating the climate crisis. In this way, we can create a healthy and resilient ocean and achieve harmonious coexistence between humans and nature.ā€ Willy Bee said

ā€œYou two need to ride on Xue Long. Then, go through the polar regions to find the God of the Ocean. You must show flexibility, perseverance and courage, and stick to your goal, so that you can obtain 17 sustainable gems from him to open the door to the polar Tianshan Mountain.ā€ Big Whale said

ā€œThe meltwater from the Tianshan glaciers forms an ice lake, creating an “Ocean” on land, allowing people in the mountainous areas to protect the health of the ocean through sustainable fisheries. This is the integration of Glacier, Land and Ocean.ā€ Willy Bee said

ā€œI see! By protecting the glaciers, we protect the land; by protecting the land, we protect the oceans; by protecting the oceans, we protect the glaciers. Nature and humans are closely linked, influencing and relying on each other.ā€ Flowery said

Finally, with the help of White Dolphin Elf, Small Algae and Big Whale, Willy Bee and Flowery cross the ocean successfully. Integrate wisdom on a legendary journey and connect to the sustainable future of mankind!

ā€œLet the Ocean Breatheā€ Experiential Learning:

  1. Ocean: The ocean covers more than 70% of the Earth, supporting the lives of humans and every living thing on Earth. However, nearly 90% of large fish in the ocean have disappeared, and nearly 50% of coral reefs have been destroyed
  2. Climate Change: Refers to long-term changes in temperature and weather patterns. Such shifts can be natural, due to changes in the sun’s activity or large volcanic eruptions. But since the 19th century, human activities have been the main driver of climate change, primarily due to the burning of fossil fuels like coal, oil and gas
  3. Greenhouse Gases: Greenhouse gases are naturally produced and can block some sunlight from being reflected back into space, making the Earth’s temperature habitable for life. They are essential for the survival of humans and millions of other species. However, as population grows, economies develop and living standards improve, total greenhouse gas emissions also increase. Carbon dioxide (CO2), the most abundant greenhouse gas in the atmosphere, accounts for about two-thirds of its total volume and is mainly produced by the burning of fossil fuels
  4. ā€œAirā€ Seed of Life: The ocean absorbs about 40% of the total carbon dioxide on Earth and produces at least 50% of the Earth’s oxygen
  5. Power Number 608: The United Nations designated June 8 as World Oceans Day to inform the public of the impact of human activities on the ocean and encourage global citizens to protect the ocean
  6. Let the Ocean Breathe: Will Legend is the initiator of the ā€œLet the Ocean Breatheā€ Conservation and Education programme. It aims to promote ocean protection, reduce marine pollution, moderate the extraction of marine resources, and restore marine biodiversity
  7. Polar: The polar regions of the Earth are the regions near the two poles and the third pole. The Arctic Ocean in the North Pole and the Antarctic continent in the South Pole are both surrounded by large amounts of ice
  8. The Third Pole: The Third Pole is also called the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau, which includes China’s Tibet Autonomous Region, the entire Qinghai Province, the Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region, Gansu Province, Sichuan Province, and part of Yunnan Province
  9. Xue Long: Xue Long is a Chinese icebreaking research vessel
  10. 17 Sustainable Gems: The United Nations 17 Sustainable Development Goals (UN SDGs)
  11. Clean Energy: such as solar, wind and hydroelectric power
  12. Sustainable Fisheries : Sustainable fisheries development aims to protect the marine environment and ensure the long-term health of fishery resources while taking into account economic, social and environmental benefits

Let the Ocean Breathe, Combat Climate Change

UN Secretary General’s Special Envoy for the Ocean Urged Let the Ocean “Breathe”: ā€œEvery Second Breath of Oxygen We Take Comes from the Oceanā€. The health of the oceans is declining. Human pollution, chemicals and plastics, as well as overfishing, all pose challenges to ocean protection. Making good use of the ocean and controlling human carbon emissions is a topic worthy of discussion by marine scientists.

Peter Thomson, the United Nations Secretary-General’s Special Envoy for Ocean Issues, addressed the (IOC/UNESCO) 2021 Intergovernmental Oceanographic Commission-UNESCO Ocean Literacy Training Courses, and the 2024 Global Ocean Development Forum respectively. He elaborated on the importance of “Let the ocean exhale oxygen and absorb carbon dioxide.”. He expressed:
ā€œIn so saying I reiterated the fact that every second breath of oxygen we take comes from the Oceanā€ (UN News, 2024)
ā€œMaking good use of the ocean and controlling human carbon emissions is a topic worthy of discussion by marine scientistsā€ (China.org.cn, 2024)

ā€œLet the Ocean Breatheā€ – absorbing heat and carbon dioxide, playing an important role in mitigating the impact of climate change, the ocean also produces at least 50% of the Earth’s oxygen. Today’s climate change is mainly caused by excessive emissions of carbon dioxide produced by human activities. Rising concentrations of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere are leading to significant climate warming, rising sea levels, consequent melting of glaciers and ocean acidification, leading to loss of biodiversity. In other words, the relationship between glaciers, land and oceans is inseparable. Without healthy ecosystems, we cannot have a healthy Earth.

Let the Ocean Breathe, Cool the Earth

ā€œGreen-blueprint 1.5°Cā€ mitigates climate change (global warming), safeguarding ā€œGlacier, Land, Oceanā€. In its 2022 report, UNESCO pointed out that if global warming can be controlled below 1.5°C, it is possible to save the remaining two-thirds of glaciers.

Under the Paris Agreement, countries agreed to significantly reduce global greenhouse gas emissions to keep the long-term global average surface temperature increase to well below 2°C above pre-industrial levels, and to pursue efforts to limit the temperature increase to 1.5°C. The significance of 1.5°C lies in the fact that even a fraction of a degree of global temperature increase can have a significant impact. For some countries and fragile ecosystems, extreme weather events and their associated risks increase with each degree of global temperature increase. The scientific evidence is clear: to avoid the worst impacts of climate change and maintain a habitable planet, we must limit global warming as far as possible and make this a top priority (Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change).

The increasing emissions of greenhouse gases caused by human activities have led to global warming. The situation is like covering the Earth with a quilt, preventing heat from being reflected into space, causing the Earth’s temperature to rise. Currently, we are experiencing unprecedented rapid climate warming due to human activities, such as the greenhouse gas carbon dioxide produced by burning fossil fuels. As the temperature rises, the Earth also begins to suffer from ā€œfeverā€. The reason is that everything, and all living things on the Earth are closely intertwined with each other. Once nature loses its ability to balance, humans will not be able to survive alone.

ā€œGreen-blueprint 1.5°Cā€ supports green development, fostering green economy, green financing (climate financing), new energy, green industries, ecological tourism, etc., reduce carbon emissions and respond to climate change. Supporting the Belt and Road Initiative to cooperate with developing countries, especially in developing green energy industries (such as solar, wind and hydropower projects, and digital management to increase the proportion of renewable energy generation), agricultural production capacity and ecological construction cooperation, helping traditional industries to achieve green transition, transforming them into green industries and building sustainable business models. At the same time, we also strongly advocate green enterprises, and industry chains to deeply participate in the ESG work of society and the community, on the one hand, to practice corporate social responsibility (CSR), on the other hand, to achieve the policy of corporate economic sustainability, jointly accelerate the green forwarding process, enable the world to reduce carbon emissions faster, achieve the ā€œ3060ā€ carbon peak and carbon neutrality goals, and promote the sustainability of humans and nature.

ā€œGreen-blueprint 1.5°Cā€ supports the three UN ā€œRio Conventionsā€ as important cornerstones for addressing the climate crisis. With the nation’s continued development, China has ranked first in power generation capacity in the world. In 1949, the annual power generation was only 4.3 billion kilowatt hours. Today, the figure has reached 9.5 trillion kWh (over 2,000 times growth). What is even more amazing is that renewable energy already accounts for one-third of society’s electricity consumption. As the largest country in photovoltaic power generation, and wind power installed capacity, China’s development of green energy is an important measure to deal with global warming and climate change. Will Legend believes that plans organized and led at the social and community levels can be implemented more effectively. By advocating for the ā€œIntegration of Glacier, Land, Oceanā€, the ā€œGreen-blueprintā€ connecting the two places and different sectors to take action to address pressing global challenges, allowing the public and future generations to pay more attention to the health of the Earth.

The Ocean Crossing Journey of Small Algae & Big Whale

The story begins with the big whales dive underwater to find food and return to the water surface to breathe. Whales bring minerals up to the ocean surface through their vertical movement, called the ā€œWhale Pumpā€. From time to time, the big whales migrate their feeding and breeding grounds across oceans, called the ā€œWhale Conveyor Beltā€. For every journey, they always bring with their good friends – the tiny algae, or more precisely, the microalgae (Phytoplankton). It turns out that whales’ waste products contain substances — especially iron and nitrogen, the nutrients which phytoplankton need for growing. The is how the tiny algae work with big whales and produce oxygen to the atmosphere.

When whales defecate, they release iron elements that promote the growth of phytoplankton (algae), increasing photosynthesis to absorb carbon dioxide and produce oxygen, thereby improving the global climate. Other marine planktonic organisms and small fish, including krill, also thrive due to the presence of whales. When the nutrient-rich feces from these whales sink to the ocean floor, some organisms that permanently inhabit the seabed also obtain nutrients from it.

Therefore, protecting the ocean and reducing marine pollution not only safeguards the survival of whales (blue whales), but more importantly, in the process, other marine organisms and even the entire Earth’s ecosystem can be protected.

Jointly Promoting Ocean Preservation Initiatives with National Body

China’s four main sea areas include the Bohai Sea, the Yellow Sea, the East China Sea and the South China Sea. These sea areas are located around China, and belong to China’s offshore waters, with a total area of approximately more than 4.7 million square kilometers. Among them, the South China Sea is located in the south of mainland China. It is connected to the Pacific Ocean in the east and the Indian Ocean in the west through narrow straits or waterways. It is a semi-enclosed sea that runs from northeast to southwest, spanning about 2,000 kilometers from north to south and about 1,000 kilometers from east to west, with a total area of approximately 3.5 million square kilometers.

The Guangdong Nanpeng Islands National Nature Reserve has a total sea area of 35,679 hectares. It is located in the southeast of Nan’ao Island, at the intersection of the three provinces of Guangdong, Fujian and Taiwan, the East China Sea, and the South China Sea. It is close to the Tropic of Cancer and is the transition zone from the tropics to the subtropics. It has obvious geographical advantages, unique hydrological and climatic conditions, peculiar seabed topography and rich biodiversity. It was included in the list of internationally important wetlands in 2015 and is known as ā€œA Typical Treasure House of Marine Biological Resources in The South China Seaā€ and ā€œA Living Natural Museum in The Northern South China Seaā€. It has a marine ecological exhibition hall, a migratory bird nature reserve, and an island national forest. There are as many as 1,308 species of marine life distributed in the reserve, including 314 species of marine vertebrates. There are 17 species of national Class I and II protected animals, and 8 species of key protected animals in Guangdong Province. It is also a migratory and habitat area for many rare, and protected aquatic wildlife such as Chinese white dolphins, finless porpoises, nautiluses, sea turtles, yellow-lipped fish, seahorses, staghorn corals and rose corals.

The Chinese white dolphin is a near-shore resident species, congregating along China’s southeastern coast. They prefer coastal waters at depths of 5-20 meters. Therefore, they can sometimes be seen in the Guangdong Nanpeng Islands National Nature Reserve. They are truly the link between land (green corridors) and the oceans, acting as friendly ambassadors. With the development of human society and the economy, the Chinese white dolphin’s habitat has been shrinking, and its population has been declining. In 1989, the Chinese white dolphin was listed as a national first-class protected wildlife species, and in 2015, it was classified as “Vulnerable” on the International Union for Conservation of Nature’s Red List of Threatened Species.

Will Legend and the Guangdong Nanpeng Islands National Marine Reserve Management Bureau jointly advocate for further strengthening marine protection to restore marine biodiversity.

Tianshan Glacial Lake (Ocean on Land) – Sustainable Fisheries

Glacial Water Builds ā€œOcean-on-Landā€, ā€œLet the Ocean Breatheā€.

Gifts from the ocean, sustainable fisheries on the glaciers. Meltwater from the Tianshan glaciers creates glacial lakes, nurturing ā€œseafoodā€, a gift from the sea. This glacial meltwater creates an ā€œOcean on Landā€, building sustainable fisheries where ā€œfarthest from the oceanā€ as conserving and sustainably use the oceans, seas and marine resources. Green transition promotes green economy, alleviating the burden on the ocean, helping increase incomes for local residents, and accelerates rural revitalization. Glaciers and land collaborate to protect a healthy ocean, ā€œLet the Ocean Breatheā€.

“Let the Ocean Breathe” – By absorbing heat and carbon dioxide, the ocean plays a vital role in mitigating the impacts of climate change. It also produces at least 50% of Earth’s oxygen. “Let the Ocean Breathe” advocates for protecting the ocean by reducing carbon emissions, overfishing, and pollution, thereby restoring marine biodiversity and ecosystems. Through sustainable fisheries, Will legend hopes to increase the supply of fish for food, reduce global overfishing, and provide the ocean with a breathing space.

Glaciers become frozen lakes, nurturing sustainable fisheries. The meltwater from the Tianshan glaciers passe through the continuous Tianshan Mountains and rushes to the Yili River Valley, giving birth to the ecologically livable Yili in Xinjiang. Building an ā€œOceanā€ on this land in the hinterland of the Tianshan Mountains fully demonstrates the integration of Glacier, Land and Ocean. Sustainable fisheries contribute to ocean sustainability: avoiding overfishing, restoring marine biodiversity, and letting the ocean breathe. Let the public understand the importance of protecting the ocean and air.

The ocean on land welcomes the gift of nature. In 2014, the first batch of high-quality triploid rainbow trout eyed eggs were transported from North America, Denmark and other places to the salmon base in Kalasu Township, Nileke County, Yili, Xinjiang. The waters in the world where this fish can be cultivated are rare, and the glacier snowmelt water from the Tianshan Mountains in Xinjiang is known as ā€œholy waterā€. In cold water at about 8°C, the eggs are carefully cared for 60 days and hatched into fry. After another 4-6 months, the young fish finally enter the breeding cages.

The salmon base is located in the Yili River Valley in Xinjiang – Nileke, with an average annual water temperature of about 12°C, an average water depth of about 150 meters, and a water surface area of about 186,000 acres. The fish fry hatchery produces 40 million fish per year. The Yili River Valley is rich in cold water resources due to the advantage of being mainly supplied by the meltwater of the Tianshan glacier. We will visit green companies and learn how to make full use of nature’s resources – using glacial water to breed salmon, accelerate rural assistance and rural revitalization. Participants will visit the salmon production line and learn about the positive development that sustainable fisheries bring to local people, communities, economy, and environment.

Build a Cradle of Ecosystem, Nurture Biodiversity

Biological diversity resources are the pillars upon which we build civilizations. Fish provide 20% of animal protein to about 3 billion people; Over 80% of the human diet is provided by plants; As many as 80% of people living in rural areas in developing countries rely on traditional plant‐based medicines for basic healthcare. The United Nations established the Kunming-Montreal Global Biodiversity Framework (also known as the Biodiversity Plan) with the purpose of promoting the belief of harmonious coexistence between humans and nature. It is hoped that different countries, organizations, and sectors can support the implementation of diversity in their own ways.

Regarding biodiversity, it is easier for the public to understand that there are many types of plants and animals, and a large number of microorganisms are included. But it turns out that real biodiversity also includes ecosystems such as glaciers, rivers, forests, lakes, deserts, grasslands and oceans. To put it simply, all species on the Earth are interconnected. Each ecosystem has different connections, interactions and influences, and in the end, a beautiful Earth can be achieved.

Safeguard the last piece of pure land on Earth, let the glacier cool, let the ocean breathe, run through the pulse to wildlife corridor, draw a ā€œGreen-blueprintā€, build a cradle of ecosystem, nurture biodiversity, make human health and prosperity sustainable. Will Legend protects glaciers and water resources, food and biodiversity, marine ecology and clean air through the Glacier, Land and Ocean Programmes respectively.

Safeguard The Ocean, Let the Ocean Breathe

The ocean produces oxygen through the phytoplankton (microalgae). These single-celled photosynthetic marine algae live near the surface. Microalgae are generally very good at turning carbon dioxide, nutrients and water into proteins, fats and carbohydrates through photosynthesis. They provide food for a wide range of sea creatures in a balanced ecosystem. Just like plants, they consume carbon dioxide, make carbohydrates using light energy, produce at least 50% of the planet’s oxygen.

Besides, these microscopic creatures absorb about 37 billion metric tons of carbon dioxide (CO2), an estimated 40 percent of all CO2 produced. This is equivalent to the amount of CO2 absorbed by 1.70 trillion trees — four Amazon forests’ worth. Whales accumulate carbon in their bodies during their long lives, each great whale sequesters 33 tons of CO2 on average. When they die (whale fall), they sink to the bottom of the ocean, taking that carbon out of the atmosphere for centuries. A tree, meanwhile, absorbs only up to 48 pounds of CO2 approximately a year*. Therefore, phytoplankton and whales are the excellent examples of carbon sequestration.

Will Legend educates public, and encourages kids to create their unique ā€œOcean Oxygen Tankā€ by planting phytoplankton (microalgae). By growing phytoplankton to learn how these tiny creatures can sequester carbon (carbon sequestration, carbon absorption or carbon fixation), and form the bases of aquatic food webs (primary marine food web) for zooplankton and krill. These zooplankton and krill will become the food sources of other marine creatures including whales. Phytoplankton builds a balanced ecosystem, saving marine creatures and whales. And of course, most importantly, it let the ocean breathe (absorb carbon dioxide and produce oxygen to the atmosphere).

Starting from the ā€œseedsā€ of phytoplankton, these microalgae will be returned to the ocean. Ultimately microalgae will be transforming into ā€œOcean Oxygen Tankā€. This is the ā€œGreen-blueprintā€ that Will Legend extends from glaciers, lands to oceans, so as to fulfill harmonious coexistence between humans and nature, achieve peace, health and prosperity, create a more beautiful Earth for our next generations.

*Source: IMF – Nature’s Solution to Climate Change

ā€œLet the Ocean Breatheā€ Practicing the Sustainable Development Goals

The core of the United Nations Sustainable Development Goal 14 is to conserve and sustainably use the oceans, seas, and marine resources for sustainable development. “Let the Ocean Breathe” uses diverse models to raise public awareness of land conservation. Through practices, the public can understand the importance of clean air released from the ocean for both humans and animals, and the role of sustainable fisheries in protecting ocean health and resources.

Representatives of enterprise and organization, teachers, and students can also participate in the SDG-in-Chinaā„¢ Science Outreach Activity – 1.5°C-ClimateActionā„¢ ā€œLet the Glacier Cool – Xinjiang Tianshan Glacier No. 1 Journeyā€, to experience the philosophy of ā€œIntegration of Glacier, Land, Oceanā€, and practice sustainable development of Humans, Society, Economy and Nature. Click here to read more.