Clean-up fever in the ocean – tomorrow (original) (raw)

Clean-up fever in the ocean

“The Ocean Cleanup” intends to scoop some 90 percent of the plastic waste that’s close to the surface from the world’s oceans by 2040. The non-profit organization was founded by a then teenager whose greatest fans include the UK pop band Coldplay.

© The Ocean Cleanup

Aiming to rid the oceans of plastic waste

The non-profit organization The Ocean Cleanup has been fighting against the pollution of the world’s oceans for ten years. Its founder and still the driving force is Dutchman Boyan Slat, who while diving in Greece in 2011 at the age of 16 saw more garbage than fish in the water. Two years later, the aerospace engineering student founded “The Ocean Cleanup” with a crowd funding initiative and presented his first ocean filter. Today, the organization that’s based in Rotterdam employs more than 130 people from more than 30 nations. CEO Boyan Slat himself continues to contribute his ideas to the research and development of ocean cleaning systems.

Following initial tests with prototypes in 2019 and 2021, “System 03,” which has since tripled in size, has been deployed. The 2.2-kilometer (1.4-mile) long U-shaped barrier is pulled slowly by two ships. The plastic waste is collected in a bag-like net extending four meters (13 feet) below the water surface and subsequently stored on board for later onshore recycling. System 03 is supposed to scoop small plastic fragments the size of a few millimeters as well as large fishing nets weighing tons and, in the process, clean up an area equating to a soccer field within five seconds.

“While we still have a long way to go, our recent successes fill us with renewed confidence that the oceans can be cleaned.”

Boyan Slat, initiator of the Ocean Cleanup project

Music on recycled plastics

Prominent supporters of “The Ocean Cleanup” include the UK pop band Coldplay with lead singer Chris Martin. When the musicians, who are strong advocates of environmental protection and sustainability on their tours as well, release their new album “Moon Music” on October 4, the release will include a limited edition, 70 percent of which has been produced from recycled plastics that “The Ocean Cleanup” captured from the river Rio Las Vacas in Guatemala. The other 30 percent of the material was recovered from former plastic bottles. In addition, Coldplay is involved in the mission of the “Interceptor 05” boat on Klang River in Malaysia.

Curbing waste streams

Scooping garbage out of rivers has moved into “The Ocean Cleanup’s” focus for good reason because the organization says that 1,000 rivers – which is only one percent of all rivers worldwide – are responsible for 80 percent of the plastic garbage in the world’s oceans. “The Ocean Cleanup” is planning to use tailored solutions positioning interceptors in the mouths of the biggest rivers. 15 of such vessels are initially planned.

This new approach has put “The Ocean Cleanup” on the same page as its critics because many scientists consider the mere removal of plastic waste floating on the surface of the sea to be a drop in the bucket even if the effort succeeded at a rate of 90 percent in line with Boyan Slat’s target for 2040. The reason is that this relatively easy to capture waste accounts for only about one percent of the plastics having migrated into the world’s oceans. Like in the case of icebergs, a much larger part is located underneath the surface. The statistics speak a similar language. Boyan Slat and his fellow campaigners say that they’ve extracted 18,000 metric tons (20,000 short tons) of plastics so far – of 100 million metric tons (110 short tons) moving around in deeper ocean waters or having deposited on the ocean floor or on coastal strips. ­

Consequently, capturing plastics in rivers – “The Ocean Cleanup” and other scientists agree – is clearly more effective than chasing it in the vastness of the oceans. Another point about which there’s agreement is that curbing the flood of plastics much earlier along the supply chains and/or switching to biodegradable materials is an even more environmentally sensible course of action.

Alternative methods

Boyan Slat and his team are not alone in their fight against marine pollution: Worldwide initiatives against plastic garbage range from the Surfrider Foundation and Children for the Oceans, which enhance public awareness of the need to avoid waste and organize cleanup campaigns, to a variety of technical solutions.

Clean-up fever in the ocean

Solar-powered garbage collection ship© Holcim

Clean-up fever in the ocean

Everwave can scoop even the smallest plastic particles from the water© everwave GmbH

Clean-up fever in the ocean

The catamaran “Manta” is supposed to scoop up to 10,000 metric tons (11,000 short tons) per year from the ocean© Seacleaners