#pacific garbage patch
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I have to admit, the Pacific garbage patch excites me a little. What freakish(endearing) microorganisms are breeding out there? The seeds of new life that will emerge when humans and our machines have collapsed into rust and dust
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Inventor Boyan Slat is on a mission to rid oceans of plastic. His team at The Ocean Cleanup designs and deploys systems that pull trash from the open ocean. Now, he’s stopping the pollution at its source: rivers where plastic is easier to catch, like those in Kingston Harbor, Jamaica.
Each year an estimated four million tons of plastic end up in the world’s oceans, killing thousands of marine creatures and accumulating up the food chain. The plastic gathers in five massive ocean gyres, the largest of which, known as the Great Pacific Garbage Patch, holds 87,000 tons of trash. After years of research, The Ocean Cleanup has created a system that removes 7000 kilograms of trash from the sea every day and a half; the team aims to remove 90% of the Great Pacific Garbage Patch by 2040.
But plastics keep flowing into the ocean, largely from the world’s polluted rivers. In Jamaica, Boyan’s team has teamed up with Alecia Beaufort and a local group cleaning up their waterways. Together, they’ve deployed a new system to trap plastic at the source as it flows downriver during a storm. Their success has inspired others to join the effort, creating a virtuous cycle of citizen action.
#Nature on PBS#wild hope#solarpunk#tidalpunk#ocean cleanup#ocean#sea#waterways#plastic#pollution#plastic pollution#jamaica#Kingston Harbor#pacific garbage patch#great pacific garbage patch#Boyan Slat#Alecia Beaufort#Youtube
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Read this in the same way I would “A MAN HAS FALLEN INTO THE RIVER IN LEGO CITY”

creatures are breeding in the pacific garbage patch
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#good news#environmentalism#science#plastic pollution#environment#great pacific garbage patch#fungi#fungus
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gonna start bringing back silly bands in 2025
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Wave Jumpers by Killian Eng
#killian eng#contemporary art#dolphins#waves#ocean#garbage#great pacific garbage patch#environmental art
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What's up with all the plastic in the ocean?
Let me talk about one really sad thing - and one where the information out there is just really bad.
A lot of you will have heard about the Great Pacific Garbage Patch. And about how you should not use plastic straws and have to recycle all the plastic you use and what not, because it is killing all the poor animals and what not.
I am here to tell you... it's all a lie. All of it.
Now, let me first say: Recycling is a scam. Because of capitalism. Yes, we could recycle at least some of the plastics we use (not all of them), but for the most part we do not do that, because it just is too expensive. So most of the plastics you and I put into recycling end up in landfills... Most likely in landfills in poor nations, where the stuff gets shipped off to. We do not really do anything good with the recycling stuff. Because making new plastics is cheaper. Simple as that. Capitalism prefers the cheap stuff. So, recycling is not happening.
But also... that plastic usually is still not the biggest problem when it comes to plastic in the ocean. Like, that landfil plastics are a problem and they should not be there. But they are not the reason for the plastics in the ocean.
Now, let me first talk microplastics, even though they are off course not that much of the plastic in volume. But where does that microplastic come from? Media wants you to believe that it is just not-recycled plastic that has somehow been made small by the ocean... But that's not it.
Instead most of the microplastics come from cars. It is abrasions from tires and breaks, that collect on the roads and then through rain get slowly transported into the oceans.
But as you can see from the graph above: Most plastics in the oceans are actually macroplastics and megaplastics. So big pieces of plastic. So, what are those?
Mostly... Fishing waste. So, fishing nets, fishing lines and stuff like that, that after use get just thrown into the oceans. This is because the fishing industry is among the industries least regulated - for the simple fact that most industries that work off the ocean are hard to regulate. And of course in the end people are very unintrested in regulating such industries.
Which is also the reason for other stuff. Overfishing. Bycatch. All those things. It just is not properly regulated - and even what regulations are there are hard to enforce because... well, who is gonna enforce them out there.
So... really. To save the oceans... we gotta eat less fish.
#solarpunk#save the oceans#microplastics#great pacific garbage patch#oceans#environmentalism#save the planet
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if the soda wax safety tools in cr video has a million haters i am one of them. if it has ten haters i am one of them. if it has only one hater that is me. if it has no haters that means i am no longer on this earth. if the world is in favor of the video, i am against the world. die hard hater of this video. hit like if you think worst and most terrible video.
#queue#saw it floating around again after this episode like the great pacific garbage patch and. let's not.#cr spoilers#in the most general sense
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Percy Jackson would have the most disgusting water bottle known to human (or god) kind and drinking out of it would kill him if he wasn't the son of the sea god send tweet
#inspired by cleaning my water bottle just now#which I do let get more disgusting than I should#he'd also be super into reusable water bottles#I imagine the great pacific garbage patch is the bane of his existence#he's so anti litter#bc of grover and the camp nymphs#but also because of his connection to the sea#percy jackson#percy jackon and the olympians#percy series#pjo#&thoughts#son of the sea god#water bottle#sustainable
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The Sharks are our mortal enemy we cannot let them win today we must set the pace for what they will face the *rest of this damn season*!!!
Yes i know we're currently ahead but I DO NOT CARE i want that team without hope by the end of this game!
#vgk lb#hockey lb#hockey stuff#vgk#vegas golden knights#the great pacific garbage patch should not know peace while we're on the ice dammit
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every time someone in my store complains about having to pay 10c for a bag I want to scream a little more about the literal floating island of trash in our ocean and the microsplastics leaking into our blood
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So this is great, but it doesn't really do a lot of good if we continue to dump garbage into the ocean. To solve a problem, you have to stop doing the thing that created the problem in the first place.
““The Great Pacific Garbage Patch can now be cleaned,” announced Dutch entrepreneur Boyan Slat, the wonderkid inventor who’s spent a decade inventing systems for waterborne litter collection.
Recent tests on his Ocean Cleanup rig called System 002, invented to tackle the 1.8 trillion pieces of plastic pollution, were a success, leading Slat to predict that most of the oceanic garbage patches could be removed by 2040.
Intersections of ocean currents have created the massive floating islands of plastic trash—five slow-moving whirlpools that pull litter from thousands of miles away into a single radius.
The largest one sits between California and Hawaii, and 27-year-old Slat has been designing and testing his systems out there, launching from San Francisco since 2013.
GNN has reported on his original design for the floating device, but his engineering team improved upon it. System 002, nicknamed “Jenny,” successfully netted 9,000 kilograms, or around 20,000 pounds in its first trial.
It’s carbon-neutral, able to capture microplastics as small as 1 millimeter in diameter, and was designed to pose absolutely no threat to wildlife thanks to its wide capture area, slow motion, alerts, and camera monitors that allow operators to spy any overly-curious marine life…
Slat estimates ten Jennies could clean half the garbage patch in five years, and if 10 Jennies were deployed to the five major ocean gyres, then 90% of all floating plastic could be removed by 2040.” -via Good News Network, 10/19/21
#great pacific garbage patch#pacific ocean#pollution#environmental protection#environmentalism#reduce reuse recycle#vote democratic#vote blue#vote blue to save democracy#vote biden#vote democrat#democracy#social democracy#democrats#democratic socialism#democrats now socialism later
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S.O.S.: let's clean up the Ocean
È più grande di Germania, Francia e Spagna messe insieme. Boyan Slat, fondatore e CEO di The Ocean Cleanup dice che pesa come 500 balenottere azzurre e che continua a crescere. È l’enorme isola di plastica, conosciuta nel mondo come GPGP | Great Pacific Garbage Patch (GPGP), che galleggia nel tratto dell’Oceano Pacifico tra le coste della California e delle Hawaii. Non si tratta di un’isola…
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Since 2019, The Ocean Cleanup has been collecting the floating plastics for later recycling. And with a new $15 million grant from the Helmsley Charitable Trust — tied to World Ocean Day on June 8 — the group will continue its efforts to remove the garbage, a $189 million project that aims to ultimately remove 15 million pounds of plastic.
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The latest iteration of the organization's system, funded by the Helmsley grant, involves a ship, which takes about five days to even reach the site, the largest plastic accumulation zone in the world. The ship then drags a nearly mile-and-a-half-long barrier at about walking pace to collect the plastic. AI monitoring allows the ship to steer toward the areas with the greatest plastic density, and underwater cameras monitor for any marine animal life caught in the "retention zone." If an animal is spotted, a safety hatch opens to allow the animal to escape.
"It was mind blowing," says Egger, who has completed the trip to the patch twice. "You have this pristine environment. It's a beautiful open ocean and you see a toothbrush just floating by, you see a kid's toy floating by. You realize the extent of the pollution that we caused is so vast that we created this garbage patch in the middle of the open ocean far away from human beings."
The Great Pacific Garbage Patch got its name from oceanographer Charles J. Moore, who coined the term after returning from a sailing race in 1997. About 85% of marine litter is plastic, according to the United Nations. Once these plastics enter a gyre, or an ocean vortex, they stay there until they degrade to microplastics.
"That garbage isn't going anywhere, it's staying in that location for the most part, breaking down, and entering our food system," said the trust's Panzierer. "It is so important for us to work collectively as an entire society to remove this because it has not only health problems for America, but has health problems for the entire globe."
Ocean plastics harm marine life, too. Animals often confuse the plastics for food because of their size and color, which can lead to malnutrition. Sea turtles caught in fisheries operating around the patch can have up to 74% of their diets composed of ocean plastics, according to The Ocean Cleanup.
And ocean wildlife can get caught and die in discarded fishing nets, also known as ghost nets, which make up 46 percent of the mass of the garbage patch according to the Ocean Cleanup.
In addition to the health effects of ocean plastic pollution, there are economic costs too — plastics in the ocean cost roughly $13 billion per year, including the clean up costs and financial losses to fisheries and other industries, according to the United Nations. The new funding will help the organization, which relies on donations, transition to using the new, more efficient cleanup system and scale it up.
To clean up the entire patch, Egger said, would cost billions.
The United Nations is currently negotiating a global plastics treaty that aims to develop a legally binding agreement to address plastic pollution by the end 2024.
#good news#great pacific garbage patch#garbage#water pollution#oceans#ocean life#clean water#ocean clean up#environmentalism#science#environment#nature#united nations#the ocean clean up
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Wave Jumpers (Variant) by Kilian Eng
#killian eng#21st century#contemporary art#seacape#great wave#garbage#the great pacific garbage patch#more 2X the size of texas
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Our Biggest Trash Catch Ever & More: The Ocean Cleanup 2024 in Review
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