The Ocean Cleanup project, the brainchild of a Dutch youth
called Boyan Slat, has finally begun. A fleet of ships have sailed into the Pacific
Ocean to deploy "Jennies", the specially designed devices
invented by Slat to clear up all the toxic material in the "Great Pacific
Garbage Patch". This area of the sea, trapped by circulating currents,
contains millions of tons of floating and suspended plastic rubbish. They range
in size from beer crates and dustbin liners to microscopic fragments. Plastic
takes a long time to decompose. It is estimated that discarded plastic in
landfill sites will be there for almost five hundred years; hence the drive for
recycling. Plastic does terrible damage to the earth's biosphere. Large animals
like turtles sometimes try to eat plastic bags, mistaking them for jellyfish,
and choking. Fishing lines and nets entangle whales and dolphins. Tiny
fragments enter the bodies of fish and sharks poisoning their systems and affecting
their fertility. The failure of human communities to process and store discarded
plastic has led to it becoming litter in many parts of the world, especially India
and China . It
then is washed into rivers by the rain and from there into the sea. It is swept
by currents until it ends up in "gyres", circular currents far from
land. Solving this problem has become one of the most urgent conservation necessities
in the world. It really made me happy to see the project underway. The Ocean
Cleanup actually inspired me to write a scene in my novel Roswell Redeemed- Humanity After Disclosure,
see: http://hpanwo-bb.blogspot.com/2018/12/roswell-redeemed-is-here.html.
I called the rubbish collection devices in the story "slat-booms" in
honour of Boyan Slat. Source: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tLcnJEMnlTs.
It is a sweet irony that at the same time an autistic teenage girl from Sweden
is in Glasgow screeching about the need for global government to halt the emissions
of a completely benign natural atmospheric gas that has no effect at all on the
climate and is actually essential for life on earth, another young person from
the Netherlands is doing something practical to rid the planet of a genuine
threat to the natural world. If I were his father I would feel deeply proud of him.
There are several dozen "garbage patches" across the world's oceans
so cleansing the entire hydrosphere will be a major task that will take many
years, but the first step has now been taken so others can follow. The project
is also working on ways to prevent plastic reaching the sea in the first place
with booms across rivers. The ultimate prevention can only really come from
nations and communities improving their rubbish disposal and recycling systems.
See here for background: https://hpanwo.blogspot.com/2021/11/climate-change-portal.html.
See here for background: https://hpanwo.blogspot.com/2021/11/climate-change-portal.html.
2 comments:
Hi Ben,
I don't get the current trend of demonising plastic as I challenge anyone to come up with a greater invention of the 20th century than plastic!
Having said that, if "they" are really interested in reducing the amount of plastic then let's see us going back to like it was "when I was a lad" and we had drinks in glass, not plastic, bottles as I'm sure plastic bottles are one of the most widely discarded items of plastic in modern times.
As usual though, the "solution" touted will probably be to take more money off us in the guise of a "plastic tax".
Gav.
Hi Gav.
I know some institutions, like coffee shops, are making their customers use paper drinking straws etc, which ironically means cutting down more trees. But the Ocean Cleanup team are not trying to stop people using plastic, they're just trying to stop it littering. I agree, plastic is a very useful invention and I'm all in favour of using it. All we have to do is when we've finished with it, throw it into a proper dustbin and have waste disposal services that take it away and either recycle it or store it safely.
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