The beach with vegetation in foreground, for article on legal rights for ocean waves

In a first, the Brazilian city of Linhares grants legal rights to waves

For the first time in history, a government has granted legal rights to a section of the ocean. The Brazilian city of Linhares passed a law declaring that the waves at the mouth of the Doce River have the right to keep breaking — protecting them from pollution, river disruption, and the kind of industrial catastrophe that nearly destroyed them less than a decade ago.

At a glance

  • Legal rights for waves: In June 2024 C.E., Linhares approved a bill recognizing its waves as rights-bearing entities, then codified the measure in August — the first time any government has extended legal personhood to part of the ocean.
  • Doce River pollution: The 2015 C.E. collapse of the Fundão dam released more than 10 billion gallons of mining waste into the Doce River, smothering the river mouth and flattening the surf breaks that had long drawn visitors to Linhares.
  • Rights of nature movement: Latin America leads the world on this issue — by one estimate, 80 percent of national initiatives recognizing the rights of nature are found in the Americas.

What the dam collapse destroyed — and what a flood brought back

The Fundão dam stood upstream on the Doce River, holding back waste from an iron mine. When it collapsed in November 2015 C.E., it released a wall of toxic sludge that traveled hundreds of miles downriver and settled at the river mouth near Linhares. The buildup gradually choked the wave patterns that surfers had relied on for generations.

The damage lasted seven years. Then, in 2022 C.E., a major flood scoured the accumulated sludge from the river mouth and restored the waves. The community did not want to wait for another disaster to undo the next one.

The new law requires Linhares to actively protect the natural flow of the Doce River, guard it from pollution, and safeguard all connected waters. The waves are no longer just a scenic amenity — they are rights-holders with legal standing.

A region that has led the world on nature’s rights

Linhares did not arrive at this moment in isolation. Latin America has spent more than 15 years building the legal and philosophical foundation that made this law possible.

Ecuador became the first country to recognize the rights of nature in its national constitution in 2008 C.E. Bolivia followed in 2011 C.E. with national legislation. Colombia’s high court has since recognized rights for rivers, a lake, and a national park. These precedents established that ecosystems can be treated as legal subjects — not just resources to be regulated, but entities with interests that courts and governments must weigh.

The Linhares law takes that logic one step further by applying it not to a river system as a whole, but to a specific hydrological phenomenon: the act of waves breaking at a river mouth. It is a narrow, precise claim, but that precision is part of what makes it significant. It says that a particular natural process, in a particular place, is worth defending on its own terms.

Why this matters beyond Brazil

Coastal communities around the world face mounting pressure from industrial pollution, upstream land use changes, and extreme weather. Legal tools to protect them have traditionally focused on human interests — property values, fishing rights, tourism revenue. The rights-of-nature framework shifts that logic by asking what the ecosystem itself needs to function.

That shift has real consequences. When a river or a wave system holds legal rights, government agencies have a positive duty to protect it, not merely a discretionary one. Polluters and developers face a different kind of legal exposure. And communities have a basis to go to court on behalf of the natural system itself, rather than only when they can show direct harm to their own interests.

The Linhares law is still new, and its enforcement will depend on political will and institutional capacity — both of which can be uneven in any jurisdiction. How courts and agencies interpret these rights in practice remains an open question.

Still, the precedent is set. The first ocean waves in history now have legal rights. Other coastal cities and countries watching Brazil are already asking whether their own shores might be next.

Read more

For more on this story, see: Yale Environment 360

For more from Good News for Humankind, see:

About this article

  • 🤖 This article is AI-generated, based on a framework created by Peter Schulte.
  • 🌍 It aims to be inspirational but clear-eyed, accurate, and evidence-based, and grounded in care for the Earth, peace and belonging for all, and human evolution.
  • 💬 Leave your notes and suggestions in the comments below — I will do my best to review and implement where appropriate.
  • ✉️ One verified piece of good news, one insight from Antihero Project, every weekday morning. Subscribe free.


More Good News

  • Sunset by smokestacks, for article on fossil fuel phaseout

    More than 50 nations attend world-first conference on phasing out fossil fuels

    Fossil fuel phaseout talks just crossed a real threshold: for the first time, more than 50 nations sat down together specifically to plan a way off coal, oil, and gas. The two-day gathering in Santa Marta, Colombia, brought together an unusually wide mix — major producers like Australia, Norway, and Canada alongside Pacific island nations like Tuvalu and Vanuatu, with Europe and emerging economies in between. No binding deals were expected, but the recommendations will feed into a voluntary roadmap being shaped under Brazil’s COP30 leadership. It’s a small, hopeful shift: producers and consumers finally talking openly about a transition…


  • Two dolphins jumping, for article on cetacean captivity ban

    Singapore stops sourcing and breeding dolphins

    Resorts World Sentosa, home to more than 20 Indo-Pacific bottlenose dolphins, is halting both wild sourcing and captive breeding at its Singapore oceanarium. The resort is now assembling an independent expert panel to figure out what’s next for the animals in its care, including a 7-year-old named Kenzo. It’s a meaningful shift from one of Asia’s most prominent entertainment venues, and one animal welfare groups have pushed toward for over a decade. With Mexico, Canada, and France already banning cetacean captivity for entertainment, this quiet decision in Singapore signals that the tide is turning across Asia too, reshaping what travelers…


  • HIV up close, for article on mother-to-child HIV transmission

    The Bahamas officially eliminates mother-to-child transmission of HIV

    The Bahamas just became the 12th country or territory in the Americas certified by the World Health Organization for eliminating mother-to-child HIV transmission — meaning babies born there now enter the world free of the virus by design, not by luck. The country built this through a quietly powerful idea: every pregnant woman, regardless of nationality or legal status, gets HIV screening at her first prenatal visit and again later in pregnancy, with treatment and follow-up offered free. Reaching that standard across more than 700 scattered islands took years of coordination between nurses, doctors, and public clinics. More than half…



Coach, writer, and recovering hustle hero. I help purpose-driven humans do good in the world in dark times - without the burnout.