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5.21.2018

Crowd Fund Cleanup Great Pacific Ocean Garbage Patch

With the great minds and a crowdfunding endeavor the cleanup of the Great Pacific garbage patch is coming!  

The Machine

It was invented by Boyan Slat, at the time, he was just a teenager.
As his website explains:
“Instead of going after the plastic, Boyan devised a system though which, driven by the ocean currents, the plastic would concentrate itself, reducing the theoretical cleanup time from millennia to mere years. In February 2013 he dropped out of his Aerospace Engineering study at TU Delft to start The Ocean Cleanup. The first cleanup prototype was deployed in June 2016, and The Ocean Cleanup now prepares to launch the first full-scale operational system into the Great Pacific Garbage Patch by mid-2018.”
This idea from the CEO of The Ocean Clean Up (what the technology is called) is certainly thought-provoking, and it’s going to be interesting to see how it works.....article continues - Collective Evolution http://www.collective-evolution.com/2018/04/24/a-huge-crowd-funded-machine-is-about-to-start-cleaning-up-the-great-pacific-garbage-patch/


StLouis Renewable Energy: Great Pacific Ocean Garbage Patch:   What is the Great Pacific Ocean Garbage Patch? A swirling sea of plastic bags, bottles and other debris is growing in the North Pac... "We could just go out there and scoop up an island," Bamford says. "If it was one big mass, it would make our jobs a whole lot easier."


Instead, it's like a galaxy of garbage, populated by billions of smaller trash islands that may be hidden underwater or spread out over many miles. That can make it maddeningly difficult to study — Bamford says we still don't know how big the garbage patch is, despite the oft-cited claim that it's as big as Texas.
"You see these quotes that it's the size of Texas, then it's the size of France, and I even heard one description of it as a continent," she says. "That alone should lend some concern that there's not consistency in our idea of its size. It's these hot spots, not one big mass. Maybe if you added them all up it's the size of Texas, but we still don't know. It could be bigger than Texas."

 While there's still much we don't understand about the garbage patch, we do know that most of it's made of plastic. And that's where the problems begin....http://stlouisrenewableenergy.blogspot.com/2010/11/great-pacific-ocean-garbage-patch.html?spref=bl








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