Photos
Too much rubbish
submitted by St Joseph Junior School Sliema : Ella Demicoli Friggier
campaign: YRE Entry
dissemination(s): other, School magazine, school media
filed under One Take Photo Photos
A Vandalised Wall
submitted by St Joseph Junior School Sliema : Kate May Davies
campaign: YRE Entry
dissemination(s): other, school media, website
filed under One Take Photo Photos
Let’s party!
submitted by gozo college Mons. Giovanni Andrea Vella Zebbug Primary School : Aagaman Lamichhane, Abhimanyu Jaiswal, Joel Duka
campaign: YRE Entry
dissemination(s): school media
filed under One Take Photo Photos
While everything seems good, nice, and ready for the party above sea level, below the sea it is another story. Plastic is everywhere — bottles, bags, wrappers, and fragments drifting through the water or lying on the seabed. The contrast is striking: while people celebrate and enjoy life above the surface, marine ecosystems below struggle with the consequences of human consumption. It is anything but a party down there.
Caring for Our Sea: Protecting Life Below Water
submitted by San Gwann Primary : San Gwann Primary Football Team
campaign: YRE Entry
dissemination(s): school media
filed under Photo Story Photos
Cleaning the sand at Għajn Tuffieħa Bay. By removing litter from the sand and seaweed, they helped prevent waste from entering the ocean and harming marine life. Their actions reflect the spirit of SDG 14: Life Below Water, proving that even simple community efforts can make a real difference in protecting fragile coastal ecosystems.
One Bottle, Big Impact
submitted by San Gwann Primary : Jamal Sobka
campaign: YRE Entry
dissemination(s): school media
filed under One Take Photo Photos
A single plastic bottle lies on the soil, already pressed into the ground. What seems small becomes a long-lasting problem: plastic breaks into microplastics, polluting earth and harming new plant growth. Protecting nature starts with preventing the waste we leave behind.
When Small Litter Becomes a Big Problem
submitted by San Gwann Primary : Jady Borg
campaign: YRE Entry
dissemination(s): school media
filed under One Take Photo Photos
Torn pieces of paper scatter across the ground, carried by wind and neglect. Even lightweight litter harms local spaces, attracting more waste and damaging the environment bit by bit. Clean communities begin with simple choices — leaving no trace behind.
A Beautiful Place, an Avoidable Mess
submitted by San Gwann Primary : Carla Borg
campaign: YRE Entry
dissemination(s): school media
filed under One Take Photo Photos
A sunny public space welcomes visitors, yet a discarded bag left on the roadside breaks the scene. Even one piece of unmanaged waste disrupts the environment and signals how urgently everyday habits must change. Clean surroundings start with simple responsibility — from each of us.
Recycling Left Behind
submitted by San Gwann Primary : Nina Piccione
campaign: YRE Entry
dissemination(s): school media
filed under One Take Photo Photos
By Recycling bins are meant to protect the environment, yet waste left outside defeats their purpose. When rubbish is not disposed of properly, recycling systems fail and pollution increases. Protecting our planet requires responsibility from everyone.
When Heritage Falls to Make Way for Profit
submitted by San Gwann Primary : Luca Daniele Xuereb
campaign: YRE Entry
dissemination(s): school media
filed under Photo Story Photos
by This photostory captures the transformation of a once beautiful home as it is torn down to build new apartments. The story highlights how development can erase unique spaces and reminds us of the importance of protecting our built environment before it is lost forever.
Hidden Waste, Visible Damage
submitted by San Gwann Primary : Flavio Guiducci
campaign: YRE Entry
dissemination(s): school media
filed under One Take Photo Photos
Old metal barrels and broken wood lie abandoned at the edge of the road, slowly rusting into the environment. What seems like “just a corner” becomes a threat to soil, wildlife, and community spaces. Waste left behind doesn’t disappear — it silently contaminates the places we all share.


