Kuruwitu community - Oceans Alive Foundation

Chapter 01

Our
Story

From 30 hectares of protected reef to a national model of community-led ocean governance. A story that belongs to the fishermen who started it.

Kuruwitu · Kilifi County · Kenya · Since 2003

The Beginning

From 30 Hectares
to a National Model

What began as a small community conservation area in Kuruwitu has grown into one of Kenya's best-known examples of community-led marine stewardship.

From 30 hectares of protected reef, the model has expanded along the coast, demonstrating that when communities are given the tools and authority to manage their marine resources, conservation can strengthen livelihoods, restore ecosystems and shape policy.

Today, Oceans Alive continues to build on those foundations, working with communities, government and partners to create healthier oceans and more resilient coastal communities.

Coral restoration divers at Kuruwitu
Reef Restoration Divers · Since 2019
World Ocean Day celebration
World Ocean Day
Community members at Kuruwitu
Kuruwitu Community

Two Decades of Impact

Milestones That Matter

2003
Origins

Community Action Begins

Kuruwitu community and founders took action to close an area from fishing, establishing Kenya's first community coastal conservation area (Tengefu) - a locally managed marine protected area that would become the model for national policy.

2003-2018
Evidence

Model Proven with Data

15 years of data collection and community management deliver unprecedented results: 400% fish biomass increase within the Tengefu, 30% coral recovery, 17% seagrass restoration, and 135% household income improvement due to fish spillover effects.

2016
Formalization

Oceans Alive Foundation Established

Founders created an NGO to share the LMMA experience and tools, offering technical support to scale to 17 neighbouring fishing communities registered as Beach Management Units (BMUs) across Kilifi County.

2017
Global Recognition

UNDP Equator Prize

Kuruwitu CBO wins the 2017 IUCN Equator Award in recognition of community action to establish the LMMA. Community representatives traveled to New York to accept this prestigious global conservation award.

2019
Restoration

Coral Gardening Program Launched

Active coral restoration begins with community divers trained as reef gardeners. Since then, 15,000+ colonies have been transplanted onto 457 artificial reefs across 39 hectares of restored reef area.

2022
Policy Milestone

Kenya's First Co-Management Plan

Establishment of the first officially endorsed Co-Managed Area (CMA) for Kuruwitu BMU under new BMU Regulations. Development of first 6-step toolkit and IUCN SAGE analysis - a policy landmark for Kenya.

2022
Blue Champion

IUCN Blue Champions Award

Kuruwitu CBO wins the 2022 IUCN Blue Champions Award, further cementing global recognition of the community-led conservation model pioneered on Kenya's north coast.

2023
Royal Recognition

Royal Visit to Kuruwitu

His Majesty King Charles III visits Kuruwitu and places a coral restoration block into the water, bringing unprecedented international attention to community-led marine conservation in Kenya.

2025
Global Stage

IUCN World Conservation Congress

Oceans Alive presents at IUCN 2025, showcasing the Kuruwitu model as a globally scalable blueprint. Featured in IUCN Panorama, Green Listing and Blue Wall - sharing lessons across the Western Indian Ocean region.

The Numbers Behind the Story

20+

Years of Community-Led Impact

12,000

Hectares Under Co-Management

15,000+

Coral Colonies Replanted Since 2019

400%

Fish Biomass Increase in LMMA

8,000+

Community Members Actively Engaged

30+

LMMAs Inspired Across Kenya

7,000+

Households Benefiting from Programs

135+

Women in Income Programs

Continue reading: Learn about the mission and values that guide every programme.

Mission & Vision