Robb Report Singapore

Green Seas, Clean Seas

Selling plastic waste for a profit to better our planet? A Singapore-based organisati­on has nailed it.

- www.sevenclean­seas.com

A SINGAPORE-BASED COMPANY is tackling the gargantuan issue of freeing our oceans of marine plastic. But it’s not stopping there. Seven Clean Seas is also working towards developing a first-of-its-kind plastic offsetting programme. This pioneering operation aims to establish an economical­ly viable and scalable funding mechanism that enables ocean plastic recovery and prevention programmes to be undertaken.

Seven Clean Seas plans to eventually operate in seven of the world’s top plastic-polluting countries in a bid to recover 10 million kilograms of ocean plastic by 2025. So far, the team behind this endeavour has establishe­d two ongoing projects: an ocean plastic recovery and intercepti­on model in Bintan, Indonesia, and the creation of river plastic recovery technology.

In Bintan, the Riau Archipelag­o Project has seen an ocean clean-up crew collecting the marine plastic within a 1.2 million-hectare protected area. The crew consists of hospitalit­y workers, including those employed by resorts on Nikoi and Cempedak Islands, but who are unable to work due to COVID-19 restrictio­ns.

Seven Clean Seas is now striving to scale up this project to encompass community-level plastic intercepti­on and the creation of a material sorting facility. The organisati­on’s second initiative, its River Plastic Recovery System, is being developed in partnershi­p with Marina Bay Sands and Howden Group with the aim of installing this river clean-up technology by the end of 2021. As much as 70 per cent of ocean plastic originates from rivers.

These projects are only made possible by the funding received through the initiative’s Plastic Offsetting model. This set-up enables companies to achieve plastic neutrality by purchasing plastic credits – not unlike carbon credits – generated from the projects to offset their necessary plastic consumptio­n against the physical recovery of plastic waste. With 300 million tonnes of plastic produced annually, initiative­s like this are essential to the recovery and reintegrat­ion of plastic into the circular economy.

Seven Clean Seas aims to recover 10 million kilograms of ocean plastic by 2025.

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Once installed, the River Plastic Recovery System will capture river plastic before it reaches the ocean.

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