THE PLACE YOU’RE PROTECTING 

With your choice of Clean Waves sunglasses, you’re helping to protect the beach of Petite Anse on the southeast of the island of La Digue in the Seychelles. A half kilometer-long stretch of powder-soft white sand lined with coconut palms, smooth granite boulders, and crystal-clear waters which slip away to reveal sand banks at low-tide, Petite Anse is one of the most beautiful beaches in a country known for some of the most beautiful beaches in the world.

 

Island: La Digue, Seychelles

Distance from Mahé: 43 km

Area: 2,500 ha

Length x width: 3.1 x 2 mi

Maximum elevation: 333 m

Population: 2,800

 
 
 
 
 
 
 

LA DIGUE THROUGH THE LOOKING GLASS

With just 2,800 people, La Digue is the Seychelles’ third-most populated island, and the kind of place where traffic, in the form of bicycles and oxcarts, stops to let its beloved giant tortoises cross the streets. With most of the population, and resorts, focused around La Digue’s sheltered west coast, those who truly want to get away from it all take a 30-minute ride through its jungle-clad interior to get to the wild beaches of Petite and Grand Anse.

Meaning ‘small cove’ in French – even if it might be larger than its neighbor, Grand Anse – as with many beaches on the southern side of the island, there is no coral reef here. It is said the early colonialists once harvested coral lime from off these shores, leading to their decline – so the waters of Petite Anse are often too deep and the currents too strong to swim. While this might make it a surfer’s paradise, without the protection of a reef, Indian Ocean swells bring with them millions of pieces of microplastic broken down from larger pieces of trash on their journey to La Digue. 

 
 
 
 
 
 
 

PLASTIC IN THE SEYCHELLES

The Seychelles are known to have some of the cleanest waters in the world, due in no small part to a 2017 campaign to ban single-use plastic and bags initiated by the country’s youth – including the then-teenage sisters and future Parley coordinators Jessica, Alvania and Nathalia Lawen. Nevertheless, as a developing archipelago nation of 155 islands with little waste infrastructure, the country faces the challenges of local and tourist industry waste. On more isolated beaches, islands and atolls lying in the sphere of monsoon and trade winds, studies have shown that trash washes ashore from as far away as mainland Asia and Africa.

The Seychelles also suffer from the particular problem of marine debris in the form of ghost fishing nets and other cast-offs from industrial fishing vessels such as purse seiners, trawlers and factory ships – many of which are from the European Union – which congregate around the incredibly rich, biodiverse waters of this tropical island nation. 

 
 
 
 
 

PARADISE PROTECTED

Your support directly funds the protection of this unique place in two ways. Working with Parley and our partners in the Seychelles, you are making it possible to intercept plastic waste on Petite Anse and upcycle some of it. You’re also supporting education and infrastructure projects to reduce plastic at source – an essential part of our mission in La Digue and beyond. 

 
 
 
 

WELCOME TO THE MOVEMENT

Your sunglasses are just the beginning of the Clean Waves journey. In the months ahead, we’ll take you to La Digue and other islands around the world through exclusive content and reports of how your support helps us protect these fragile marine ecosystems from plastic pollution. 

It's great to have you onboard.

 
 

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