Today’s Solutions: July 04, 2026

An area twice the size of England will soon become a “blue belt” of protected waters after the British government created 41 new marine conservation zones. The newly-protected areas ranging from Studland Bay, near Bournemouth, to the Goodwin Sands off the Deal coast in Kent will cover 4633 sq miles (12,000 sq km) of marine habitat, eight times the size of Greater London, bringing the total number of marine protected areas around the British coastline to 355.

Critics have in the past dismissed marine conservation zones as “paper parks” with few creating “no-take” zones that prevent all fishing, but conservationists said these zones had begun to make a real difference, with some damaging activities halted. For instance, after scallop dredging was banned in Lyme Bay in 2008, the seabed’s sea fans, sunset corals and ross corals have flourished. The short-snouted seahorse and the ocean quahog are amongst the species that will benefit from the new protections.

Solutions News Source Print this article
More of Today's Solutions

Passive cooling techniques reduce AC strain by up to 80 percent

In the summer months, many of us are of two minds: we’re dying to keep it cool, but we’re also dying not to spend ...

Read More

Coping with transnational grief

For Amrita Chavan, leaving Mumbai for Canada at the age of 19 was the start of a new experience, but it also marked the ...

Read More

How to spot early signs of frailty and build strength for the long run

BY THE OPTIMIST DAILY EDITORIAL TEAM Frailty may seem like an inevitable part of getting older, but it’s actually a diagnosable medical condition that ...

Read More

New stem cell treatment shows promise for reversing vision loss in macular de...

BY THE OPTIMIST DAILY EDITORIAL TEAM For millions living with age-related macular degeneration, seeing the world head-on becomes an exercise in frustration. Faces blur, ...

Read More