Tell The EPA To Stop Corporations From Poisoning Our Oceans
Final signature count: 523
523 signatures toward our 30,000 goal
Sponsor: Free The Ocean
Toxic dumping is destroying marine life and threatening human health—demand action now to stop the pollution and hold decision-makers accountable before it’s too late.

Plastic bags choking turtles. Toxic waste sinking to the seafloor. Birds feeding cigarette butts to their young. This is what ocean dumping looks like—and it's happening on a massive scale.
Every year, industries dump millions of tons of garbage, chemicals, and mining waste into our oceans1. Some of it sinks. Some floats. Some gets eaten by sea life. All of it causes damage that spreads far beyond the waterline.
Our Oceans Are in Crisis
From coral reefs to deep-sea ecosystems, marine life is suffocating under the weight of our waste. In Papua New Guinea, independent reviews have called the dumping of mining waste an environmental catastrophe2. In the United States, decades of past dumping left behind radioactive barrels, chemical sludge, and heavy metals off our coasts3.
Today, the Marine Protection, Research and Sanctuaries Act (MPRSA) blocks many of the worst practices, but gaps remain. Vessels can still discharge some waste offshore. Mining companies in other parts of the world dump tailings directly into the ocean. Much of the plastic entering the sea does so through legal land-based routes. And the U.S. still hasn’t ratified the international treaty that bans most ocean dumping worldwide4.
Trash That Doesn’t Stay Put
This pollution doesn’t stay put. Ocean currents carry it across borders, turning isolated incidents into global threats. Dumped waste creates dead zones, contaminates seafood, and fills the bellies of animals already pushed to the brink5. Even remote coastlines and Indigenous waters are not spared.
We Can Still Act
We can’t afford to look away. We need stronger action now—from our lawmakers, from regulatory agencies, and from the corporations responsible. That starts with demanding accountability from the agencies tasked with protecting our oceans.
The Environmental Protection Agency and NOAA have the authority to close the loopholes. We need them to use it.
Raise your voice. Sign the petition to demand an end to ocean dumping and protect the health of our oceans, our food, and our future.