LET'S SAVE PLANET BLUE
The ocean is home to an abundance of life, biodiversity, and a vital source for the planet's well-being. But it's choking in plastic waste and threatening the ambiance of marine life, disrupting ecosystems and biodiversity, and if left uncollected it eventually breaks up into microplastics with potential health risks for nature and society. We need all hands on deck and immediate actions to break the plastic wave.
THAT'S WHY WE ARE TAKING ACTION
If you take the water out of Watery, all you have left is a why. So why is this important to us? Because we would be no one without it - and neither would you. That's why we are committed to helping clean up the waters surrounding all of us. Water isn't just for fun - it provides life for us all. By partnering up with ReSea Project, we are committed to stopping plastic waste from polluting our waters.
As true water-lovers, we need to protect what is most sacred to us and stop water pollution
– WATERY –

is part of the fight against ocean plastic pollution
START PERIOD OF COLLECTION
From May, 2021


SO FAR WE'VE ENSURED THAT
of plastic waste is being removed from the world’s oceans and rivers.
WHICH IS EQUIVALENT TO
25,000
Plastic bottles
OR
50,000
Plastic bags
1 plastic bottle = 20 gram
1 plastic bag = 10 gram

THE PLASTIC IS BEING REMOVED FROM THESE AREAS
Ciliwung River,
Jakarta, Indonesia
COORDINATES:
-6.1251173, 106.7754941
Western Central Pacific Ocean,
Jakarta, Indonesia
COORDINATES:
-6.1053611, 106.8467222
Dadap River,
Jakarta, Indonesia
COORDINATES:
-6.0860485, 106.7221809
Coordinates are a representative selection of collection points of the total collection period. The ToolChain blockchain platform is used to collect, record, and monitor collection data.

Jakarta, Indonesia
DOCUMENTED & TRACEABLE
A fully traceable collection process certified by the independent third-party DNV enables you to trust that when you support Watery you are part of making oceans and rivers cleaner from plastic waste. Have a look at how the plastic waste is collected:







WHY INDONESIA?
Local acts with global impact
<