Mission to Break up Pacific Island of Rubbish Twice the Size of Texas
Scientists and conservationists on the expedition will begin attempts to retrieve and recycle a monument to throwaway living in the middle of the North Pacific.
The toxic soup of refuse was discovered in 1997 when Charles Moore, an
oceanographer, decided to travel through the centre of the North Pacific
gyre (a vortex or circular ocean current). Navigators usually avoid oceanic
gyres because persistent high-pressure systems — also known as the doldrums
— lack the winds and currents to benefit sailors.
Mr Moore found bottle caps, plastic bags and polystyrene floating with tiny plastic chips. Worn down by sunlight and waves, discarded plastic disintegrates into smaller pieces. Suspended under the surface, these tiny fragments are invisible to ships and satellites trying to map the plastic continent, but in subsequent trawls Mr Moore discovered that the chips outnumbered plankton by six to one.
The damage caused by these tiny fragments is more insidious than strangulation, entrapment and choking by larger plastic refuse. The fragments act as sponges for heavy metals and pollutants until mistaken for food by small fish. The toxins then become more concentrated as they move up the food chain through larger fish, birds and marine mammals.
“You can buy certified organic farm produce, but no fishmonger on earth can sell you a certified organic wild-caught fish. This is our legacy,” said Mr Moore.
Because of their tiny size and the scale of the problem, he believes that nothing can be solved at sea. “Trying to clean up the Pacific gyre would bankrupt any country and kill wildlife in the nets as it went.”
In June the 151ft brigantine Kaisei (Japanese for Planet Ocean) will unfurl its sails in San Francisco to try to prove Mr Moore wrong. Project Kaisei’s flagship will be joined by a decommissioned fishing trawler armed with specialised nets.
“The trick is collecting the plastic while minimising the catch of sea life. We can’t catch the tiny pieces. But the net benefit of getting the rest out is very likely to be better than leaving it in,” says Doug Woodring, the leader of the project.
With a crew of 30, the expedition, supported by the Scripps Institution of Oceanography and Brita, the water company, will use unmanned aircraft and robotic surface explorers to map the extent and depth of the plastic continent while collecting 40 tonnes of the refuse for trial recycling.
“We have a few technologies that can turn thin plastics into diesel fuel. Other technologies are much more hardcore, to deal with the hard plastics,” says Mr Woodring, who hopes to run his vessels on the recycled fuel.
Plastics bags, food wrappers and containers are the second and third most common items in marine debris around the world, according to the Ocean Conservancy, which is based in Washington. The proportion of tiny fragments, known as mermaid’s tears, are less easily quantified.
The UN’s environmental programme estimates that 18,000 pieces of plastic have ended up in every square kilometre of the sea, totalling more than 100 million tonnes. The North Pacific gyre — officially called the northern subtropical convergence zone — is thought to contain the biggest concentration. Ideal conditions for shifting slicks of plastic also exist in the South Pacific, the Indian Ocean and the North and South Atlantic, but no research vessel has investigated those areas. If this exploratory mission is successful, a bigger fleet will depart in 2010.
Mr Woodring admits that Project Kaisei has limitations. “We won’t be able to clean up the entire ocean. The solution really lies on land. We have to treat plastics in a totally different way, and stop them ever reaching the ocean.”
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28 Comments so far
Show AllCertainly most commendable. At the same time we, the consumers, should bring pressure on all those companies that bring their products in plastic containers and also force them to allow the purchaser to return them for recycling. We are drowning in our own garbage!
Now, will you all quit eating seafood?
J4zonian,
I hear you loud and clear and am working on my psychological self. I believe we can only change our current ecological policies, which have little to do with the public's well being, by electing those who would serve The People instead of The Corporation. Keep the pressure on, as you say.
I have finally freed my mind, after 30 years of voting, from the Republican/Democrat paradigm and am now in search of a good human who fill the role of true representative. Unfortunately, I see too many good people, my friends mostly, who are so afraid to break from the "norm", our two party system.
So, I wait for their consciousness to rise while I send my letters to Congress knowing that with each new rise in consciousness we move closer to our goal of having, and sustaining, a healthy planet.
I am planning on moving there and becoming the King of Plastic Trash Island!! And Brittney Spears can be my Plastic Trash Queen!!!
"The only means of strengthening one's intellect is to make up one's mind about nothing, to let the mind be a thoroughfare for all thoughts." - John Keats
"Brittney Spears can be my Plastic Trash Queen!!!" - Please - Take Nancy Pelosi instead!
Thanks to this article I will again get conscious not to accept any plastic bags at any store
We all need to buy anything we can in a reasonable container such as : eggs in a cardboard container not a styrofoam
Milk in cardboard rather than plastic
Participate in any local business - I buy my yogurt from a neighbor who sells it in a glass jar that I return to her.
We need to insist that bottles have a deposit on them and we need to get after the politicians to stop coddeling the container industry-- this story about the huge amount of refuge in the Oceans is a good wake-up call and we can use it.
DO NOT GIVE UP--
Similarly, I choose products that have been made or grown close to home -- even if they cost more. And I choose products with the least packaging if possible. Who was it who said "Be the change you want to see in the world"? N.M.
Mohandes Gandhi
Why do you need a ban? It's very easy -- just say "No" to bags when shopping. I always carry a cloth bag with me and bring my own reusable bags for groceries. I have a great 'Janet' basket that I've been using for two years now, and if the purchase is something that will fit in my purse, why do I need a bag? If all else fails, I carry my purchase out to the car -- bagless. N.M.
That's great, but the problem is this....many human beings are too lazy to care or too hurried to think. I carry cloth bags with me, but I still am working on remembering to bring them in the store. How many times have I gone in and then said "Drat!!" and had to go back out.
When something is bad, when it adversely affects the community, you don't wait for people to catchup with doing good.....you outlaw it.
Of course, an outright ban on at least plastic bags, will never happen. Too many lobbyists. The beautiful plantet earth will someday breath a big sigh of relief when the last human being dies...
Never say never.
What do you call a thousand lobbyists floating face down in the northern subtropical convergence zone?
A good start?
Our current plastics will be banned when we
A) get emotionally healthy, or
B) have somthing ecologically better to replace them--time release biodegradable cellulose, or wood or bamboo or better relationships with our mothers. See answer A.
Not just in the Pacific. I was in Curacao some years ago and I found the
most beautiful beach I had ever seen on the western shore of the island.
It is called Knip Bay. White sand and the bluest water you had ever seen,,,,
until I went diving below the surface. The visibility was hundreds of feet but
on the bottom was a solid foot of garbage as far as the eye could see. It was
staggering. That exquisite beach was a garbage dump of plastic. It brought me
to tears seeing that. And still they ask you in the supermarket "paper or plastic". How about you can either buy or rent these cloth bags???
Fred in Boston
OUPS! Some poor devil in some company is going to be fired for letting information like this hit the public. . . .
It surely won't be allowed to spread to the National News here in the USA.
KEEP DANCING AMERICA, . . . .THE PIPER CAN WAIT.
What island is this? Hawaii?
It's likely in the Northwest Hawaiian Islands, a restricted travel research zone, recently declared a marine sanctuary! [possibly the only good legislation of Bush2]
As much as I applaud this, is using trash to propel an oil fired engine really a great idea ecologically? See the Sail Transport Network for a progressive view on the future of ocean travel and delivery of goods..
And what is it gonna take for us to completely BAN all 'disposable plastic' products except for those few items which are necessary perhaps for a medical use? I wonder how many billions of plastic shavers and water bottles have been dumped alone? It's obscene and shows a complete lack of thought past the next ten minutes...
Obviously, the first step is to reduce any further dumping of any waste into our oceans. Most of this stems from indifference to recycle any and everything that can be recycled. The city of Houston is JUST starting pick up recycling of paper, certain plastics and glass: the easiest things to recycle. Figuring out how to recycle most of what is still landfilled should be the subject of on going research in our colleges and universities.
But any attempt to deal with the current double-the-size-of-Texas plastic island should be applauded. Reducing the size of this global abomination should be a global burden and responsibility, but I suspect that most of the pile came from "us civilized folk."
I wonder how many Somali "pirates" would sign up to physically remove waste from the ocean in exchange for a living, sustainable income for themselves and their neighbors....
Interesting concept, using the discarded plastic for fuel for the ships. The evolution of shipping:
(1) human power
(2) wind power
(3) Diesel power
(4) trash power
These plastic soup islands are in every ocean in the world, not just the pacific. New York used to dump its trash at sea. Word is they still do via the mob. Many cities around the world do it this way.
My boat used to have a 1993 coast guard sticker that permitted dumping trash at sea xxx miles from shore as long as the "dunnage" was ground down to a certain diameter. I though to myself great, I wonder how many years that's been going on.
I fail to see the need for strong, large, expensive central governments. They always climb in bed with big business and in the latest bush administration functioned more like organized crime than a government of the people. Let's gut the government by 90% since all they ever do anyway is look the other way, and give funds meant to fix problems to CEO's with no auditing or accountability required at all.
The first Tarp 800 billion turned into motor yachts for Fortune 500 executives.
Big anything is bad and I'm sick of it.
TJ
"All tyranny needs to gain a foothold is for people of good conscience to remain silent." - Thomas Jefferson
Gutting the government is one way this was allowed to happen in the first place. Smaller government is not the answer, and to say it is is only playing along with neoconservatives who have been at the vanguard of the war on government in the interests of multinational corporations. Small government is not the answer; big government is not the answer. We will not improve government, industry or anything else until we have a psychologically healthy electorate. Work on that if you want things to get better.
Does the above comments by me resemble spam? For some reason the cd spam filter thinks so. I think spam is disgusting. Never touch the stuff myself.
Long live the oceans!
Here's an excellent (albeit long) article on the problem:
http://www.orionmagazine.org/index.php/articles/article/270/
And rather than using plastic bags at the grocery store, we could start using these:
http://www.ecobags.com/
And... plastic can be made from hemp:
http://www.hempplastic.com/newSite/index.htm
"You never change things by fighting the existing reality. To change something, build a new model that makes the existing model obsolete"
-R. Buckminster Fuller
This is the responsibility of every major petrochemical company in the world. Right on down the line. This is the corporate monster incarnate
Hmmmm, back in the early sixties my wife saw what appeared to be an enormous ice flow in that area. It turned out to be a huge island of plastic detritus. The report was treated with either humor or disinterest. Been going on for a looooong time!
"...supported by the Scripps Institution of Oceanography and Brita, the water company..."
I support business that truly has it's heart in the right place! Let me make a note to myself here.
Brita? Like the non-recyclable plastic water filters that make your water taste like plastic? How ironic.
True! Kind of like supporting the current prez., take what you can get and keep the pressure on.
If Brita, is spotlighted maybe they will use natural products in their filters, it only makes sense.