Social Initiatives

We collect our industrial logistic data on our respective interrelated industries that apply to our own chosen directives for social initiatives.  We compile this data on a quarterly basis and yield regular reports that are produced and verified by our managements’ organization. We oversee our sustainable strategies and social support efforts within our organization to optimize energy efficiency and reduce waste.

In addition, we invest our time in pro-bono projects all over the globe with substantial long-term impact on sustainability, conservation and social issues. These include:

  • Poverty Alleviation; this is directly related to economic Infrastructure development for global trade, system and structure engineering in underdeveloped nations.
  • The integration of conservation in a nationwide education system as a whole and the modification of America’s public schools with conservancy serving as the forefront.
  • The development of green-growth strategies for developing nations.
  • The conservation of our all oceans, lakes, rivers and any other water ways worldwide. Partnering with Ocean Conservancy, Oceanariums and Association of Zoos Aquarium (AZA), as well as, our newly developed relationship with the World Wildlife Fund (WWF) and related organizations.
Our future collaboration with these organizations and new US policies are similar to the Integrated Ocean Management Project and to the new policies of the Port State Measures Agreement (PSMA); which just passed in Oct 15, 2015, will contain cost and prepare the overall systems to operate efficiently.  Additionally, the PMSA is implementing fresh solutions that can conserve the environment, important for land, ocean, food, culture and facilitate economic development.
Ocean and Human Ecology
The Oceans of the world are in distress.  This is the environment in which marine animals, together with the human race, emerge; our birth place. The Oceanariums,  Aquarium and Zoo’s are considered one of the safest places for marine and land animals especially for the observation, protection and preservation of their race. The education that the current oceans health care leaders (not referring to aquariums leaders) may have received in their past or as a youth, we believe, are incomplete.  Issues, such as; Trash Ocean Pollution, Seas Water Rising, Over Fishing, Global Warming and a modernized Marine and Land Conservation policy to name just a few, were not centrally taken into consideration in their indoctrination. This, in turn, has led to many other mis-understandings and distortions that the current state of the world’s oceans and marine animals are in and where they live.

The earth’s oceans have many problems and are currently in the process of failing.  If such leaders are to become lay supporters of our future and the future of our children, they will require to be better than ever before and do more than just good or fair in institutional education programs. It is imperative we engage in opening the minds of our youth by expanding their knowledge thru education, before they become mis-informed about conservation issues.  Strong governance of ocean health care platforms with engaged community support programs should co-exists; from our educational institutions, along with local and nationwide community programs and governed leaders, especially the leaders of the aquarium worlds that have an abundance of untapped marine knowledge and that are embedded into the nations communities.  This comes from only a very deep understanding and precision experience of the underwater world’s identity; values and limitations which the AZA’s of the world deal with an up-close, day-to-day basis.

We ask just a few critical questions concerning the current care takers of the world’s oceans and other groups that are taking care of them or that have a vast interest:  “In these times, is enough being done to protect the world’s oceans and the animals?”  “Are there adequate and appropriate people?  Is there proper education in our schools that are capable of dealing with these complex problems of the present and future?”  NLI has teamed up with GromSocial.com, whom have children that are interested and need to be informed about these conservation issues, given that they are a vital part of the future and a part of our survival as a human race.  Organizations like Ocean Conservancy and AZA, along with a small percentage of other institutions provide a beginning of a legitimate and realistic response to those questions facing our important future. It is accomplished by the conscious intentional identification and formation of the “next generation” of care takers of the world’s oceans.  It describes the succession-planning that current aquarium care takers to the oceans health care will need to identify the competencies necessary to ensure sustainable potential support in the future and the future of our planet.  “What if the world oceans had the precision care and were treated like the aquariums of today?” Would that change our oceans around the world or our knowledge and the way we currently live on earth?