Scottish Daily Mail

THE SHIP THAT EATS PLASTIC

- Daily Mail Reporter

IT’S been nicknamed the combine harvester of the seas – a yacht that will scoop up plastic from the ocean and recycle it as it sails.

The Ocean Saviour, unveiled yesterday, is designed to collect five tonnes of plastic waste a day. It will be the first vessel to power itself by turning the waste into fuel.

The 230ft (70metre) vessel has booms on either side which will funnel floating pollution into it.

The plastic will be chopped finely, milled and heated to super-high temperatur­es to produce gas that can be burned for energy with minimal pollution, making the £40million catamaran self-powering. The Ocean Saviour design was revealed by yacht brokers TheYachtMa­rket at the Southampto­n Boat Show.

Richard Roberts, of Southampto­n, the project’s co-founder, said: ‘It’s staggering to think there is currently more than five trillion pieces of plastic in the ocean which is having a huge detrimenta­l impact on our ecosystem.’

He said the yachts like the Ocean Saviour ‘should be going up and down our coastlines all the time – they could be the combine harvesters of the seas.’ It was not revealed when the boat will be ready to sail.

The environmen­tal devastatio­n caused by plastic in our oceans has been highlighte­d by the BBC’s Blue Planet documentar­y, narrated by Sir David Attenborou­gh, and by the Daily Mail’s Turn The Tide On Plastic campaign.

The Ocean Saviour design was unveiled only a few days after efforts began to tackle the Great Pacific Garbage Patch – an area of floating trash that is twice the size of France. This week the Ocean Cleanup System 001, which consists of a 2,000ft (600 metre) floating barrier, was towed out of San Francisco for trials before it is used to tackle the plastic pollution in the Pacific.

 ??  ?? Cleaning up: An artist’s impression of the Ocean Saviour
Cleaning up: An artist’s impression of the Ocean Saviour

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