Peace Boat: On the Frontline

Peace Boat  ·  Week 2 of 4
The Green Room — LuxeTerre Editorial

On the Frontline

Behind every statistic about the ocean's decline, there is a person who woke up this morning knowing that the water surrounding their home is rising. Peace Boat understood something essential: those people are not the problem to be solved. They are the leaders we have been waiting for.

Last week I wrote about the ocean I grew up with in Haiti — crystalline, blue to the floor, something I took for granted until I came to America and saw what deliberate neglect looks like in a body of water. That contrast — between what the ocean is and what we have made of it — is the reason I believe so strongly in the work Peace Boat does. Because Peace Boat is not an organization that talks about the ocean from a distance. It is an organization that puts the people closest to the crisis on a ship and sends them out into the world to testify.

This week, I want to introduce you to that work more closely. To the programme at the heart of it. To the countries it represents. And to the voices it has amplified — young people from nations whose entire existence is, right now, contingent on what the rest of the world decides to do about the ocean and the climate. People for whom this is not advocacy. It is survival.

The islands most threatened by ocean degradation
are not the ones that caused it.

The Ocean and Climate
Youth Ambassador Programme.

Launched at the United Nations Ocean Conference in 2017, Peace Boat's Ocean and Climate Youth Ambassador Programme is one of the most specific and human responses to the ocean crisis that exists anywhere in the world. Its premise is simple and its execution is rigorous: bring young leaders from the Small Island Developing States — the nations most immediately threatened by rising seas, warming waters, and marine degradation — onto Peace Boat's ship, and send them across the globe to tell their stories to citizens, journalists, civil society organizations, and government representatives in every port the ship enters.

The programme is not a symbolic gesture. It is a certified voluntary commitment under the UN Sustainable Development Goals, formally recognized by the United Nations. Peace Boat is an endorsed actor in the UN Ocean Decade. And the programme has an explicit mandate: amplify the voices that global environmental policy most urgently needs to hear, from the communities that policy most urgently needs to serve.

Over three editions of the programme, Peace Boat has provided capacity development for twenty-six youth leaders. The fourth edition expanded the programme further, adding an alumni network to allow graduates to continue working together across their home communities in the Pacific, Indian Ocean, and Caribbean long after the voyage ends. A fifth edition focused on youth from across the African continent was launched in partnership with the Africa Europe Foundation and the World Resources Institute following COP27. The programme keeps growing because the crisis it responds to keeps growing.

What actually happens
on the ship.

The programme is not simply passage. The time aboard Peace Boat is structured and intensive — a floating curriculum designed to take young people who are already advocates in their own communities and give them the skills, the networks, and the platform to become advocates on a global stage.

I
Capacity Building

Onboard workshops covering media skills, climate negotiation, campaigning strategy, and how to engage effectively with government representatives and international bodies.

II
Port Engagement

In each city the ship enters, ambassadors hold press conferences, public events, and meetings with local officials and civil society organizations — carrying their testimony directly to communities around the world.

III
Cultural Exchange

Ambassadors share the cultural heritage of their home islands with other passengers and port communities — making visible what is at risk, not just ecologically, but culturally and historically.

IV
Alumni Network

Graduates return home with a global network of youth leaders and access to an ongoing platform for coordinated action across the Pacific, Indian Ocean, and Caribbean regions.

Guest educators join the programme onboard at various points in the voyage — including representatives from the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change and senior figures from partner organizations. The ambassadors are not students being taught. They are leaders being equipped.

The countries that cannot
afford for us to look away.

The ambassadors who have participated in the programme to date come from twelve nations across three ocean regions. Each of these countries shares a reality that the industrialized world has largely been able to insulate itself from: the ocean is not a metaphor for them. It is the boundary of their existence — and that boundary is moving inward, season by season, storm by storm.

Countries represented in the Ocean & Climate Youth Ambassador Programme
Fiji Palau Tuvalu Kiribati Marshall Islands Seychelles Maldives Mauritius Trinidad & Tobago Barbados St Lucia Belize

Tuvalu's highest point is less than five meters above sea level. Kiribati is composed entirely of coral atolls — some of which are already being swallowed by the rising Pacific. The Marshall Islands have been negotiating with neighboring nations for decades about what statehood looks like when your land disappears beneath the water. These are not hypothetical futures. They are present realities, experienced by millions of people who did not cause the crisis that is consuming their homes.

This is the injustice that the programme forces into view — not through statistics, but through people. Through a young woman from the Seychelles at a climate conference in Egypt, speaking into a microphone about what it means to watch a coastline she grew up on recede year by year. Through a youth leader from Palau standing on the deck of a ship in open water, telling an interviewer that the beauty of the ocean is magical — and terrifying — because if the current rate of change continues, the ocean may be the only thing left of the Pacific islands he calls home.

"Stepping out onto the deck once we reached open ocean was an incredible experience, because the beauty of the ocean is magical, but also incredibly terrifying. Because if the current rate of climate change continues, the ocean may be the only thing left of the Pacific islands I call home."

Genevieve Jiva  ·  Pacific Island Climate Action Network  ·  Ocean & Climate Youth Ambassador

"As a native of Palau, a Small Island Developing State, my world has always revolved around the ocean. The rising tides, shifting weather patterns, and ecosystem balance between people and nature are more than talking points to me — they make up the fabric of daily life."

Alan Junior Seid  ·  Palau  ·  Youth for the SDGs

Why this matters to
every traveler.

Many of the nations represented in Peace Boat's programme are among the world's most visited destinations. Palau's marine sanctuary is one of the most celebrated in the world. The Seychelles is on the bucket list of every serious traveler who has ever looked at a photograph of turquoise water over white sand. The Maldives, the Caribbean islands, Fiji — these are not remote abstractions. They are places that the global travel industry has built entire economies around. And they are the places most threatened by the behavior of that same industry.

There is something important in that. Not as a reason for guilt, but as a reason for responsibility. When you travel to Palau, you are a guest in a place that is fighting for its own survival while simultaneously offering you one of the most extraordinary natural experiences on earth. The least that kind of hospitality deserves is travelers who show up understanding what is at stake — and who make choices accordingly.

That is what conscious travel actually means. Not just choosing the hotel with the green certification, but understanding the broader system you are moving through. The ocean is that system. And the young people Peace Boat puts on that ship are, in every sense, its most credible spokespeople.

What I keep coming back to, when I think about the Youth Ambassador Programme, is that it is not asking anything of these young people that they haven't already been doing their entire lives. They have been living with the consequences of the ocean crisis since they were born. The programme just gives them a ship, an audience, and the tools to make sure that living means something beyond the borders of their own islands. That is, I think, the most elegant form of advocacy I have ever encountered.

Nicolette Stephanie Templier  ·  Founder, LuxeTerre

On June 10th, this work
comes to New York.

The inaugural Ocean Gala and Blue Innovation Reception on June 10th is the first time Peace Boat has created an event of this scale in the United States — and it is, in essence, a public gathering of exactly the kind of community the Youth Ambassador Programme has been building for nearly a decade. UN partners, blue economy innovators, ocean scientists, civil society leaders, and youth advocates from Small Island Developing States, all aboard a ship that has carried their stories across a hundred countries. All in the same room. For one evening.

One of the evening's centerpieces is the announcement of the inaugural Ocean Stewardship Awards for SDG 14: Life Below Water — honoring the individuals and organizations doing the most consequential work on behalf of the ocean right now. It is a room that takes the ocean seriously. It is a room worth being in. And with registration closing June 1, time is genuinely short.

Inaugural  ·  Peace Boat US  ·  June 10 · NYC

The Ocean Gala & Blue Innovation Reception

Manhattan Cruise Terminal  ·  4pm Check-in · 5pm Gala · 7:30pm Reception
Registration closes June 1. Valid photo ID required.

LUXETERRE Get Tickets  → $25 off · Closes June 1

Next week in this series: L'Edit Bleu — the curated sustainable designer showcase LuxeTerre is bringing to the Ocean Gala. The full story of what we are building aboard that ship, and the New York designers who are bringing it to life.

Week I The Ocean Steward Read It Read Now ↗
Week II On the Frontline Reading Now
Week III L'Edit Bleu — The Designers at the Ocean Gala Coming Soon
Week IV After the Gala: What Comes Next Coming Soon
The Green Room · LuxeTerre Editorial · luxeterre.com
←  Back to The Green Room The Green Room · LuxeTerre Editorial
Read More

Peace Boat : The Ocean Steward

Peace Boat  ·  Week 1 of 4
The Green Room — LuxeTerre Editorial

The Ocean Steward

The ocean gave me my first understanding of beauty. Then I watched it be treated as a drain. This is a story about what we owe the sea — and what happens when a ship full of people decide to act like stewards rather than spectators.

I grew up with the ocean as a given. From our family home in Haiti, the water was simply part of the landscape of childhood — impossibly blue, crystalline, the kind of clarity that lets you see straight to the ocean floor as though the sea itself were made of glass. It was not something we talked about protecting. It did not occur to us that it needed protecting. It was just there, the way the sky is just there: ancient, immovable, the backdrop against which everything else happened.

Then I came to America. And I saw what the ocean looks like here — brown in places, thick with debris, plastic bottles turning slow circles in the surf, a film on the waterline that the eye learns to stop registering because registering it is too uncomfortable. The contrast is not subtle. It is a confrontation. The same ocean. Two completely different relationships with it — one that understands the sea as something to be honored, and one that has quietly decided it is a drain.

What I have never been able to reconcile, since that first confrontation, is how deliberate it all feels. This is not neglect by oversight. The ocean is one of the great wonders of this planet — the system that produces more than half the oxygen we breathe, that absorbs over 90% of the heat our warming atmosphere generates, that sustains the livelihoods of three billion people. We know this. We have known this for a long time. And we have chosen, in policy and in practice, to treat it as a disposal site anyway.

That choice — and it is a choice — is what I want to talk about. Because I think if more travelers understood the ocean the way I understood it growing up in Haiti — as something alive, specific, and irreplaceable — they would travel very differently. And that is what this series is about.

199M tonnes of plastic currently estimated in our oceans
11M+ additional tonnes entering the ocean every single year
3B people worldwide depend on the ocean for their livelihoods

What Peace Boat actually is — and why it matters.

Peace Boat is not a cruise company. That distinction matters more than it might initially seem. Founded in Japan in 1983, Peace Boat is an international NGO that uses a voyage-based model to advance peace, sustainability, and human rights — carrying activists, educators, youth leaders, and advocates around the world on a ship that functions simultaneously as a floating university, a diplomatic vessel, and a platform for direct global action.

Its credentials are unimpeachable. Peace Boat holds Special Consultative Status with the United Nations Economic and Social Council. It is an active partner in the United Nations Ocean Decade. Its ship sails with the logos of the UN Sustainable Development Goals and the International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons — the 2017 Nobel Peace Laureate — painted on its hull, visiting approximately 100 countries every year. Most recently, Peace Boat co-organized an official side event at the 2025 UN Ocean Conference in Nice, focused on mobilizing youth and emerging ocean professionals — a session that filled to capacity, standing room only.

At the center of Peace Boat's environmental work is its Ocean and Climate Youth Ambassador Programme — a flagship initiative that brings young leaders from Small Island Developing States onto the ship. These are young people from Fiji, Barbados, the Seychelles, Palau, and Timor-Leste — communities where the ocean's decline is not a distant policy concern but a present, daily, existential reality — given a platform to carry their message to citizens and governments across every port the ship enters.

This is the organization I have had the privilege of working alongside. And this June, in New York City, something significant is happening aboard that ship — for the very first time.

The ocean produces the oxygen for every second breath you take.
Most travelers have never been asked to reckon with that.

What we are actually
traveling through.

The numbers around ocean health have reached a point where they should stop being background information and start being central to how we make travel decisions. The ocean absorbs roughly a third of all the carbon dioxide human activity produces — and as that carbon dissolves into seawater, it is making the ocean more acidic, threatening the coral reefs that house 25% of all marine life. Our coral reefs are not decorative. They are foundational.

Meanwhile, the plastic crisis has moved well beyond the visible. Between 75 and 199 million tonnes of plastic waste currently sit in the world's oceans. More than 11 million tonnes enter every year. Microplastics have been found in the deepest ocean trenches, in Arctic ice sheets, and in 85% of the fish we eat. The Great Pacific Garbage Patch now covers an area twice the size of Texas and contains 1.8 trillion pieces of plastic. Without decisive intervention, plastic will outweigh fish in the ocean by 2050.

The tourism industry is not innocent in this. Coastal tourism generates enormous volumes of single-use plastic. Resort development destroys mangroves and coral — the very ecosystems that make a coastline beautiful enough to visit in the first place. The industry that profits most directly from the ocean's beauty is also among the forces accelerating its decline. That is the contradiction at the heart of sustainable travel that most of the industry prefers not to name directly. I am naming it because travelers who genuinely care deserve the clarity.

What drew me to Peace Boat's work was not just the scale of what they do — it was the methodology. They understand that environmental action without community is policy without teeth. The young people they bring onto that ship are not passengers. They are the argument: living proof that the communities most affected by ocean degradation are also the ones most capable of leading the response, if we give them the platform and the resources to do so. That is a model for how every travel organization should think about its relationship to the places it moves through.

Nicolette Stephanie Templier  ·  Founder, LuxeTerre

The inaugural Ocean Gala.
Aboard the ship. In New York.

On the evening of June 10th — two days after United Nations World Oceans Day — Peace Boat US will host the first-ever Ocean Gala and Blue Innovation Reception aboard the Peace Boat ship, docked at the Manhattan Cruise Terminal. This is an inaugural event. There has never been one before. And the timing, the venue, and the guest list make it one of the most significant ocean-focused gatherings of the year in New York City.

The Gala will bring together partners from the United Nations, private sector leaders, youth ocean advocates, blue economy innovators, and civil society organizations — all aboard a ship that has circumnavigated the globe in service of exactly these values. The evening opens with the Ocean Gala at 5pm, transitioning into a Blue Innovation Reception at 7:30pm, with appetizers and drinks served onboard. The dress code is Blue Tie and ocean-inspired. Formal, purposeful, and unlike any event happening in this city this June.

Peace Boat US will also be announcing the inaugural Ocean Stewardship Awards for SDG 14: Life Below Water — celebrating the individuals, organizations, and innovators putting the ocean at the forefront of marine research, conservation, and nature-based solutions. The award alone signals what kind of room this will be.

LuxeTerre is proud to be part of this evening. And we want to bring our community with us. Use code LUXETERRE at checkout for $25 off your ticket.

Ocean
Inaugural  ·  Peace Boat US  ·  New York City Blue Tie  ·  Formal

The Ocean Gala &
Blue Innovation Reception

Aboard Peace Boat  ·  Manhattan Cruise Terminal, NYC
Date Wednesday, June 10, 2026
Venue Manhattan Cruise Terminal · 711 W 12th Ave, New York
Schedule 4:00 pm Check-in · 5:00 pm Gala · 7:30 pm Blue Innovation Reception · 9:30 pm Disembarkation
Registration Deadline Monday, June 1, 2026

An evening onboard Peace Boat with UN partners, blue economy leaders, youth ocean advocates, and civil society — in celebration of World Oceans Day and the UN Decade of Ocean Science. Appetizers and drinks served onboard. Valid government-issued photo ID required. All attendees must register independently.

LuxeTerre reader exclusive LUXETERRE $25 off your ticket

Use code LUXETERRE at checkout  ·  Registration closes June 1  ·  Tickets not transferable

I believe the most powerful thing the conscious travel community can do right now is show up — physically, financially, and publicly — for the organizations doing the hardest work on ocean health. Peace Boat has been doing that work for over four decades. The Ocean Gala is an opportunity to stand in the same room as the people who are refusing to look away from what is happening to our seas, and to add your presence and your voice to that refusal.

Over the next four weeks, I will be bringing you deeper into this story — into what Peace Boat's programs actually look like on the ground, into what an evening like this means in the broader context of ocean governance, and into what LuxeTerre's collaboration with Peace Boat is building toward. This is week one. There is much more to come.

June 10th. Manhattan Cruise Terminal. Aboard Peace Boat. Code LUXETERRE for $25 off. Come be part of it.

Week I The Ocean Beneath Our Itinerary Reading Now
Week II Peace Boat & The People on the Frontline Coming Soon
Week III Inside the Ocean Gala Coming Soon
Week IV After the Gala: What Comes Next Coming Soon
The Green Room · LuxeTerre Editorial · luxeterre.com
←  Back to The Green Room The Green Room · LuxeTerre Editorial
Read More