1st place: Melati Riyanto Wijsen
Founder, Bye Bye Plastic Bags and Youthtopia
This 21-year-old’s fight to save our planet and its oceans began in 2013 at the age of 12. She co-founded Bye Bye Plastic Bags (BBPB) with her sister Isabel with the aim to abolish single use of plastic bags in her hometown, Bali. Through awareness and education campaigns, the initiative provoked policy and mindset change. BBPB is today one of the largest youth-led organisations in Indonesia and has over 52 volunteer led teams in cities round the world.
“I started with absolutely no business plan, strategy or funding, but I had a clear idea of the impact I wanted to create,” she said, during her acceptance speech.
This clarity has been her guiding principle and helped put her on the world stage in conservation, from cochairing global conferences to sitting in advisory panels.
In 2021, Melati starred as the chief protagonist in the fi lm Bigger Than Us, directed by French director Flore Vasseur and produced by Marion Cotillard—it follows her on a journey around the world in search of like-minded peers to join her mission. Premiered at Cannes Film Festival, the film was nominated for a César.
2nd place: Thanda Ko Gyi
Founder, Myanmar Ocean Project
A passionate diver, Thanda Ko Gyi decided to dedicate her life to marine conservation after witnessing firsthand the devastation a single fishingnet could cause to marine life. Shefounded Myanmar’s first non-profit ocean conservation organisation, Myanmar Ocean Project (MOP) in 2018, and in 2019, with support from the National Geographic Society, Ocean Conservancy and Global Ghost Gear Initiative, set out with her team on a year-long expedition into the country’s Myeik Archipelago to find out more about Abandoned, Lost, or Otherwise Discarded Fishing Gear (ALDFG). In 11 months, the team extracted over 1,800 kg of harmful fishing nets from 89 dive sites. She also works closely with local fishing communities to find out how the degradation of marine ecosystems impacts their way of life.
Thanda’s quest to save marine biodiversity was propelled by her love for manta rays, but she explained how her work with MOP opened her perspective. “At first it used to be about the fish and ocean, but I realised that it’s also about the people and the community. If their survival needs are not met, we cannot expect them to talk about the ocean,” she said matter-of-factly. Her ultimate quest is to create opportunities for others in Myanmar to see the ocean as she has been able to.
3rd place: Dr Louisa Ponnampalam
Co-founder, Marecet Research Organization
A Cetacean ecologist by education, Dr Louisa Ponnampalam co-founded MareCet Research Organization (MRO) in 2012, Malaysia’s fi rst and only nonprofit NGO dedicated to research and conservation of marine mammals and the promotion of marine stewardship.
The organisation has since engaged more than 4,000 students through various outreach and education programmes, and is recognised globally for its work in the conservation of marine biodiversity. In 2019, three of its field research sites were recognised as Important Marine Mammal Areas by the International Union for Conservation of Nature.
For Louisa, what started as a way to channel her love for dolphins since childhood, has become a life’s mission.
“I hope that through our work people will realise the value of our oceans and be motivated to take every day steps to conserve that which supports us,” she added in her acceptance speech. “Conservation is about perseverance and strategy, but also the people—we are at the heart of the problem and the solution.”