The Star Malaysia

Great cleanup

-

The Ocean Cleanup project developed by 21-year-old founder Boyan Slat aims to tackle plastic pollution in the Great Pacific Garbage Patch.

SAN FRANCISCO: A supply ship towing a long floating boom designed to corral ocean plastic has set sail from San Francisco for a test run ahead of a trip to the Great Pacific Garbage Patch.

The ambitious project by The Ocean Cleanup, a Dutch non-profit group, hopes to clean up half of the infamous garbage patch within five years when all systems are deployed.

After five years of preparatio­n and scale model tests, “this is what it’s all about, this is the culminatio­n of all the efforts,” said an excited Boyan Slat, the 24-year-old Dutch CEO and founder of The Ocean Cleanup.

Under a cloudless sky, the Maersk Launcher ship sailed on Saturday past the Golden Gate Bridge out into the Pacific sea accompanie­d by a flotilla of sailboats and kayaks.

The supply vessel was towing a 600m-long boom device dubbed System 001, designed to contain floating ocean plastic so it can be scooped up and recycled.

The system includes a tapered three-meter skirt to catch plastic floating just below the surface.

The ship was heading to a spot 240 nautical miles off the California coastline for a two-week trial before sailing to the Great Pacific Garbage Patch, a floating trash pile twice the size of France that swirls in the ocean halfway between California and Hawaii.

“The main mission is to show that it works, and hopefully then in a few months from now, the first plastics will arrive back into port, which means that it becomes proven tech- nology,” said Slat as he witnessed the launch.

“That means that we can start scaling up to a whole fleet of maybe 60 of these cleanup systems,” he said.

Laurent Lebreton, the project’s lead oceanograp­her, said they believe the Pacific garbage patch contains some 80,000 metric tonnes of plastic waste.

“Plastic has started to accumulate in the ocean since... the 1950s,” said Lebreton.

He said that scientists first learned about the plastic concentrat­ing in the Pacific garbage patch in the 1970s.

Land-based plastic comes mainly from rivers, Lebreton said.

“But we also find a lot of fishing ropes, fishing nets,” he said. —

 ??  ??
 ?? AFP ?? Trash collector: Ocean Cleanup’s System 001 being towed out of the San Francisco Bay in San Francisco, California. The prototype technology, developed by Slat (inset), is designed to contain floating ocean plastic so that it can be scooped up and recycled. —
AFP Trash collector: Ocean Cleanup’s System 001 being towed out of the San Francisco Bay in San Francisco, California. The prototype technology, developed by Slat (inset), is designed to contain floating ocean plastic so that it can be scooped up and recycled. —

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia