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  • Once there was a Stone Age, a Bronze Age

  • and now we are in the middle of the Plastic Age.

  • Because every year we produce about 300,000,000 tons of plastic

  • and fraction of that enters rivers, water ways and eventually the oceans.

  • If you want to eat a biscuit nowadays

  • we have to buy a biscuit within a plastic wrapper,

  • within a plastic tray, within a cardboard box,

  • within a plastic foil, within a plastic bag.

  • It's not hazardous nuclear waste -- it's a biscuit.

  • And this is me. I love diving

  • just taking you through my holiday slides here.

  • This is at the pristine Azores Islands and this is how their beaches look.

  • Covered with plastic fragments.

  • Due to sun and waves over the years

  • the garbage breaks down into ever smaller pieces, but remains plastic.

  • And, well interestingly, you don't see a lot of red particles in here

  • because those look like food

  • to birds more than any other color.

  • So this is the result.

  • And well, the debris primarily collects at these 5 rotating currents

  • called the gyres, where it doesn't only directly kills sea life,

  • but due to the absorption of PCBs and DDTs, also poisons the food chain.

  • A food chain that includes us -- humans.

  • And while diving in Greece

  • I came across more plastic bags than fish

  • and astounded by the depressing sights

  • my Scottish dive buddy turned to me and said,

  • "A lot of jellyfish is here, dear. Seen about a thousand."

  • There were no jellyfish.

  • I won't talk about environmental issues in general.

  • I think the common response is, well that's a long way off.

  • That's for our children to worry about.

  • So hello, here I am.

  • Why don't we just clean it up?

  • There are a multiple reasons why

  • current plastic pollution researchers believe we should focus on prevention,

  • for example through education, rather than attempting a cleanup operation.

  • Because we would need to deal with 5 colossal areas -- each moving around.

  • Plastic sizes ranging from these massive ghost nets to molecules -- bycatches and emissions.

  • Furthermore we would need to get all the plastic back to land.

  • It would need to be financially realistic and

  • in fact the total amount of plastic within the gyres [is] unknown.

  • But about a year ago, when I was on my way to the hairdresser's

  • and I must admit I don't go there often but I had this little epiphany.

  • I saw even old people throwing rubbish in the water

  • and I thought, well some people will just never learn, will they?

  • We'll need the combination of both roads

  • and we'll need them soon.

  • So then I simply used this list of concerns

  • as challenges, and in fact a week later as a school assignment,

  • I had a chance to spend a lot of time

  • on a subject of choice together with a friend of mine.

  • And this gave me the perfect opportunity

  • to do new and fundamental research regarding plastic pollution.

  • I then went on a holiday to Greece taking this manta trawl with me,

  • which is the common device for sampling plastic,

  • and so I had to leave home all my clothes

  • due to low cost airlines weight limit policies.

  • Well, the trawl we built, however, is 15 times finer

  • than the regular one. And what we discovered was

  • that the count of those minute particles is in fact 40 times higher

  • than the larger particles. So we have to take these small plastics out,

  • but then we wouldn't want to take the important plankton out as well.

  • Luckily these could simply be separated using centrifugal forces.

  • However, nobody knew how much G forces common zoo-plankton could survive.

  • So we took the trawl out again, and we didn't have a boat,

  • so and we tested it, and in fact they can survive over 50 Gs, which is more than enough

  • for successful separation.

  • And then in order to know up to which depth the ocean surface should be cleaned,

  • we designed and built something that I call the multilevel trawl.

  • We basically stuck ten trawls on top of each other.

  • Here you can see us testing that on the North Sea,

  • I thought it was a great day -- I was the only one who didn't get sick

  • but then the so perfectly working trawl broke and

  • of course we didn't quit there, because I believe you can't clean up something

  • you don't know the size of.

  • I've heard the estimations ranging from several hundred thousand tons

  • all the way to a hundred million tons.

  • I knew we really need a better estimate -- some scientific data.

  • So then I simply contacted some professors from the universities

  • Delft, Utrecht and Hawaii -- who then actually helped us in determining

  • how much plastic there is in the top layers of the gyres.

  • The result -- a whopping 7.25 million tons of extractable plastic in 2020.

  • That's the weight of 1,000 Eiffel towers floating in the gyres.

  • Now, researcher and effect discoverer of the Great Pacific Garbage Patch, Charles Moore

  • estimates it would take 79,000 years to remediate that.

  • However, I believe the Great Pacific Garbage Patch

  • can completely clean itself in just 5 years.

  • And that is a difference of 78,995 years.

  • Well, of course, this is the conventional idea of extracting litter,

  • so you have a vessel and a net fishing for plastic.

  • Of course multiple vessels could be used to cover a larger area,

  • but by spanning booms between those vessels,

  • suddenly a much larger area would be covered,

  • because the essence is not to catch the debris, but divert it.

  • Because there is no mesh size, we can even get out the smallest particles,

  • and since all organisms can simply move under the booms,

  • we'll be able to eliminate bycatches by 99.98%.

  • But, if we want to do something different

  • shouldn't we also have to think differently.

  • For example then: the absorption of PCBs by plastic is not such a bad thing,

  • it's a good thing.

  • Get all the plastic out and simultaneously remove tons and tons

  • of persistent organic pollutants from the marine environment.

  • But how would we minimize environmental, financial and transportation cost then?

  • Let's use our enemy to our advantage, OK?

  • The oceanic currents moving around is not an obstacle -- it's a solution.

  • Why move through the oceans if the oceans can move through you?

  • By fixing the "ships" to the seabed and letting the rotating currents

  • do their work -- vast amounts of funds, manpower and emissions will be saved.

  • The platforms will, of course, be completely self-supportive

  • receiving their energy from sun, currents and waves.

  • And inspired by my diving at the Azores, It now actually seems

  • that the best shape for these platforms is that of a Manta Ray,

  • by letting its wings sway like a real manta,

  • we can assure contact of the inlet with the surface

  • even in the roughest weather.

  • Well, imagine a zigzag array of just 24 of these platforms cleaning an entire ocean.

  • Let's make a comparison, OK?

  • These are the beaches of Hong Kong, earlier this year.

  • The largest plastic spill in history. And this is their source,

  • just 6 containers.

  • How much could we get out?

  • Over 55 of these containers per day.

  • Not only is plastic directly responsible for over a billion USD in vessel damages a year,

  • no, the awesome surprise for me was that

  • if we sell the plastics retrieved from the 5 gyres we'd make over $500,000,000

  • and this is in fact more than the plan would cost to execute.

  • In other words -- it's profitable.

  • But I believe that the key thing is that

  • only if we realize change is more important than money, money will come.

  • And yes, it will be one of the largest environmental rescue operations yet, but we created this mess.

  • Heck, we even invented this new material first before we made this mess,

  • so please don't tell me we can't clean this up together.

  • Thank you very much.

  • (Applause)

Once there was a Stone Age, a Bronze Age

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TEDx】海はいかにして自分たちをきれいにできるか。ボヤン・スラット、TEDxDelftにて (【TEDx】How the oceans can clean themselves: Boyan Slat at TEDxDelft)

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    小元 に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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