Giant Floating Trash Collector Sets Off To Clean The Great Pacific Garbage Patch

in #news6 years ago

 

Pollution in the world’s waterways is one of the most serious  challenges that our species is facing, and creative solutions are going  to be needed in order to solve this problem. People from all over the  world have recognized this issue and have been working hard to come up  with their own ideas to clean trash from oceans and other bodies of  water. One of the most interesting and promising solutions has been  developing since 2013 when then 19-year-old Boyan Slat first publicized  his plan to clean up the world’s oceans. 

Slat, now 23, has created a  company around this mission and this invention called the Ocean Clean Up  Project. The plan has been in development for many years, and although it was  originally expected to make its first voyage in 2016, it is finally  ready for beta testing in the ocean next month. “It’s definitely exciting after five years of testing and  expeditions that we finally get to launch the first system and put it to  the test,” says Slat. 

Slat’s invention consists of an anchored network of floating booms  and processing platforms that could be dispatched to garbage patches  around the world. Working with the flow of nature, a trash collecting  array will span the radius of a garbage patch, acting as a giant funnel  as the ocean moves through it. The angle of the booms force plastic in  the direction of the platforms, where it would be separated from smaller  forms, such as plankton, and be filtered and stored for recycling.  Since nets are used instead of booms, this makes the cleanup safe for  animals. 

  There is no doubt that plastic pollution is a serious problem that  needs to be addressed by the people of the planet. According to a report  published by the Ellen MacArthur Foundation, by the year 2050, there  will be more plastic in the oceans than there are fish. 

Right now, one  garbage truck of plastic is dumped into the ocean every minute. 

This disturbing reality is underscored by the recent discovery of another giant patch of plastic—bigger  than Mexico—floating in the South Pacific Sea. It was discovered by  Captain Charles Moore, who found the North Pacific Garbage Patch in  1997. The effects of this ocean epidemic are captured in videos of marine life being impaled, trapped or killed by plastic. 

One distressing video shows researchers in Costa Rica removing an entire plastic straw from the nostril of a sea turtle. In another video,  a whale asks fishermen for help removing a plastic bag from its head  and then appears to flap its fin in appreciation. One million seabirds  die each year from ingesting plastic debris, and up to 90 percent have plastic in their guts. 

For a more in-depth conversation with Boyan Slat, check out his appearance on The Joe Rogan Experience: 

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The problem is that such giant trash collectors would also destroy any marine life on the bottom of the ocean!

This is absolutely stupendous! A fleet of 60 nets out in the ocean, and a 50% reduction every 5 years. Wow! I bet they'll optimize and finish even faster, if this gains major international cooperative attention.

Very cool idea. I'm glad their are still people out there trying to make a better world for us to live in. Its too bad their aren't more projects like this. If we spent more time trying to solve real world problems rather than simply making larger profits imagine the world we would live in.