PADI® Celebrates 60 Years of Seeking Adventure and Saving the Ocean
Sixty years since John Cronin and Ralph Erickson sparked a vision in a small US apartment that would change the sport of diving forever, PADI® (Professional Association of Diving Instructors®) has solidified itself as the world's largest and most trusted scuba diving organisation. Cronin and Erickson forged PADI’s humble beginnings with only USD $30; now, the organisation has a global membership of 128,000 professionals and 6,600 dive centres and resorts in more than 180 countries who together have issued over 30 million diver certifications.
PADI first introduced the diver education system to India in the late 1990s. Today, scuba diving has grown into an increasingly popular adventure sport, with PADI dive centres spread across the country, including Mumbai, Lakshadweep, the Andaman Islands, Goa, Puducherry, Bengaluru, and Kerala, among other locations.
60 Years of Leadership and Impact
In 2003, the leadership torch for PADI was passed to Dr. Drew Richardson, President and CEO for PADI Worldwide, who marks his own 40th anniversary of dedicated service to the organisation this year. Under his guidance, PADI has evolved into a purpose-driven global lifestyle brand that continually advances diver education, safety, ocean access, and marine protection, ensuring that the underwater world remains accessible to all.
“Sixty years ago, a torch was lit, and a movement was born beneath the sea,” says Dr. Richardson. “Since then, we have built upon that legacy with the same spirit of adventure, friendship, and purpose that began the dream of bringing the world closer to the ocean, one diver at a time. This year, we celebrate the progress that we have made towards our mission to create a billion Torchbearers to explore and protect the ocean together.”
PADI rolled out the Pillars of Ocean Change, which was designed to unite the global dive community in working together on the organisation’s vision to achieve balance between humanity and the ocean.
With the support of global non-profits PADI AWARE™ and the PADI Foundation, PADI has:
- provided more than USD $6M in grants for marine research, science, and education
- fuelled over 3,50,000 local initiatives that create positive ocean change
- protected over 100 vulnerable shark and ray species
- untangled over 41,000 marine animals
- removed over 2.5 million pieces of debris
- adopted and monitored over 3,300 dive sites with 28,000 surveys
“Founded by divers for divers, PADI is an organisation that has long been obsessed with transforming lives and creating positive ocean change by making the underwater world accessible to all,” continues Dr. Richardson. “Since the very beginning, the global PADI membership has inspired millions to dive with confidence and purpose, teach others, elevate diver safety, and carry the torch. And with each new diver we certify, we add to our ability to lift the seas and each other.”
60 More Years of A Future Fuelled by Purpose
Now planning for the next sixty years, the organisation looks to welcome millions more as certified PADI divers who are trained to both seek adventure and save the ocean.
“I’m excited about the future of PADI, because we’re on the brink of something big,” explains Richardson. “I see a future of optimism, one that includes all of us working together to inspire the next generations of ocean advocates. Humanity and the ocean are both vulnerable, both co-dependent. Divers are a fortunate group of people who understand this. I see a future where one billion people think and feel this way. This is the art of the possible and what PADI is determined to achieve. Together, we will create positive ocean change.”




