DutchNews, June 22,
2016
![]() |
| Artists impression. |
The Ocean
Cleanup A project to clean the oceans of plastic soup will come a step nearer
reality on Thursday when an experiment with a 100 metre long barrier begins 23
kilometres off the Dutch coast.
The project was launched by former Delft
University student Boyan Slat in 2014 and uses long floating arms to capture
the floating plastic but allows fish and plankton to pass through unharmed.
On
Thursday the barrier, resembling black plastic pillows, will be towed to the
location of the coast of Scheveningen, where it will be monitored for the
effects of real-life sea conditions.
‘We want to see if we can build something
which can withstand storms,’ Slat told broadcaster NOS. ‘The North Sea can be a
violent place and if it remains whole here, it will stay whole anywhere.’
Funding
The Dutch government and construction company Boskalis have each put
€500,000 into the experiment and the rest of the €1.5m cost has come from an
anonymous benefactor. The experiment will take one year.
The floating barriers
are one of the most critical elements of the concept, since they are
responsible for capturing and concentrating the plastic debris. The real life
trials follow extensive computer modelling and scale model testing in
controlled environments.
A second test, off the coast of Tsushima Island in
Japan, will take place in the second half of 2016, Slat said last year.
.
Related Articles:
An
impression of how the system might look. Photo: Ocean Cleanup
|


No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.