Style Edit: Rolex’s Perpetual Planet Initiative champions marine protection in Ningaloo Coast and Exmouth Gulf
- Australian marine biologist Ben Fitzpatrick is supported by Rolex’s Perpetual Planet Initiative in his quest to keep the humpback whales’ nursery safe from development
Today, the Perpetual Planet Initiative sees the watch brand supporting individuals and organisations that strive to understand nature and devise solutions to modern environmental challenges.
The Perpetual Planet Initiative was born in 2019 out of its long-standing partnership with the National Geographic Society and Mission Blue, an organisation supporting a global network of marine protection areas. Among the mandates of Mission Blue, founded by Rolex Testimonee Sylvia Earle, is identifying Hope Spots – ocean ecosystems and regions across the planet which demand immediate attention for preservation and protection.
Marine biologist Ben Fitzpatrick reached out to Mission Blue in hopes of applying for Hope Spot status for Ningaloo Coast and Exmouth Gulf in his native Western Australia.
Fitzpatrick is a leading advocate in the protection of the area, which he first fell in love with as a child. He began publicly campaigning to save the Ningaloo Coast from development in 2003.
The thriving Ningaloo Reef ecosystem is said to be the west coast sister of the Great Barrier Reef and is a Unesco World Heritage site. Around the corner of the reef’s peninsula is the Exmouth Gulf, which is lined with an arid-zone mangrove system and is nicknamed Ningaloo’s nursery, for its role sheltering endangered species.