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  • It's no secret. We have got a trash problem. Every year, we produce about 300 million

  • metric tons of plastic globally. These plastics can end up in rivers, oceans, and eventually

  • our food chain. But a group called The Ocean Cleanup says that their new suite of technologies

  • can help address this growing problem. When a piece of plastic finds its way into

  • the ocean, exposure to sunlight and the elements work to break it down into smaller and smaller

  • fragments. Marine animals often mistake plastic trash for food, which can lead to malnutrition

  • and a potential build-up of toxic chemicals in their bodies. And since humans are a part

  • of the food chain, plastics find their way into us, too.

  • With all this in mind, The Ocean Cleanup team set about tackling the world's largest accumulation

  • zone: The Pacific trash vortex, or proverbially known as the Great Pacific Garbage Patch,

  • It's an area in the ocean that's bounded by the massive North Pacific Subtropical Gyre

  • and about three times the size of France, containing more than 1.8 trillion pieces of

  • plastic. Here's how The Ocean Cleanup's system

  • works. A 160 meter floater gives the system buoyancy, while an attached extended cork

  • line floats above a 3 meter deep netted skirt. The skirt is long enough to catch plastic,

  • but short enough for marine creatures to swim beneath. It's deeper in the center, so that

  • the current's pressure pushes the system into a U-shape, funneling plastic into the

  • net. A parachute at the back drags in the water to control speed, and the whole system

  • is equipped with GPS to monitor its location. This October, after a year of system testing

  • and several setbacks along the wayincluding a snapped floaterthe Ocean Cleanup team

  • has announced that its plastic collecting system is working.

  • Despite this recent success, the team has faced its fair share of criticism, as some

  • experts believe that the device could pose harm to marine life, and particularly neuston,

  • which exclusively live on the ocean surface. But perhaps the biggest

  • criticism launched against The Ocean Cleanup has been from those who say that building

  • an expensive structure far from shore ignores the more practical and cost-effective measures

  • that are already in existence, like volunteer beach cleanups and waterway technologies like

  • Baltimore's Mr. Trash Wheel, which can stop plastic before it reaches the ocean.

  • It looks like The Ocean Cleanup team took these criticisms seriously, because while

  • they were busy iterating the design of their offshore ocean cleanup system, they were also

  • working on a super-secret side project. At a press conference last week, they unveiled

  • The Interceptor— a system designed to capture plastic closer to shore. More specifically,

  • at the mouth of rivers. To help focus their efforts on the most-polluting

  • rivers first, the Ocean Cleanup team set about to measure exactly how much plastic is flowing

  • out of our rivers and entering the ocean. Based on this research, they found that just

  • 1% of the world's riversor 1,000 out of 100,000—are responsible for roughly 80%

  • of the ocean's garbage, with small urban rivers contributing the most to pollution.

  • They made it their goal to tackle all 1,000 of these rivers by 2025.

  • To catch the waste, the Interceptor is anchored into the riverbed at a strategic location

  • where plastic is concentrated and boats have enough room to pass. Plastic waste is guided

  • by the floating barrier into the mouth of the Interceptor, which the river current helps

  • push onto a conveyor belt. As the debris moves across the belt, it's separated from the

  • water and delivered to the shuttle, which distributes the trash into one of six dumpsters.

  • Sensors detect when the dumpsters are full, at which point a text is automatically sent

  • to local operators saying that, ahem, “it is time to take out your trash”. The trash is

  • then carted off to waste management for processing. At peak performance, this solar-powered device

  • can extract more than 100,000 kilograms of trash per day. The comparative cost between

  • this and other cleanup efforts is not yet known, though The Ocean Cleanup says

  • the Interceptors are ultimately cheaper than deploying nothing at all.

  • And their Interceptors are already hard at work, cleaning up waterways in Jakarta, Indonesia,

  • and Malaysia's Klang River. The group is also preparing to deploy two more systems in Vietnam's

  • Mekong Delta and Santo Domingo in the Dominican Republic, a place you may remember from last

  • year's viral videos showing giant waves of plastic garbage after heavy rains. Thailand

  • and LA County are also in talks with the group. But to see how much plastic The Ocean Cleanup

  • is able to keep from reaching our oceans, we'll first need to see how effective the

  • initial Interceptors actually are. To reach their goal of deploying systems at 1,000 rivers

  • by 2025, it's estimated that a new Interceptor will need to be deployed every 2 days. The question is, can

  • they really do it? With a little luck, we may soon see a fleet of these devices tidying

  • up our rivers and oceans for future generations. If you want to learn more about the Great

  • Pacific Garbage, check out this episode here. Let us know down in the comments if you liked

  • this video, and don't forget to subscribe for more Seeker, thanks for watching.

It's no secret. We have got a trash problem. Every year, we produce about 300 million

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海洋清潔公司的新攔截器能否幫助解決我們的塑膠問題? (Could Ocean Cleanup’s New Interceptor Help Solve Our Plastic Problem?)

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    林宜悉 發佈於 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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