2nd. we need to spread this!
Agreed! And I'm referring to this news, not the plastic.
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2nd. we need to spread this!
Truly disgusting, but reality is that people don't care, not even our fellow divers. You see it every day in posts on the forums where facts are disputed regarding overfishing, coral bleaching, offshore drilling, global climate issues, etc. As long as it remains out of sight, it will remain out of mind.
You want to make a change today that will actually help? Stop taking plastic bags when you shop. It's that simple. Get and use reusable shopping bags. It will remind you each time you shop that you are working for a solution and it will stimulate you to find other ways that will help that will become easy for you to adopt and before you know it, you're making a big difference and helping to inspire others to follow. It's contagious. Tell the folks in line at the store about the Plastic Trash Vortex while you're waiting in line with your reusable bag in hand. Tell the cashier why you choose your own bags in casual conversation to make her aware of how doing this really will help.
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My idea is to go out there into the middle of the vortex with some kind of factory ships that could somehow collect and process the plastic into a modular floating island. (Ooh, I just thought of this...We could call this island 'Shaka Doug's Island' and it would be a cool place to stop for a cold one as you crossed the Pacific. Yeah? No? Maybe??) The ships could produce huge hollow geodesic cells that could hook together and float. It could take forever to fully realize this but imagine if they could build sections that linked together and eventually build a base station or maybe even someday a landing strip...completly out of plastic!
This idea sounds crazy I know but it may not be too far fetched. If this trash accumulation is the size of the state of Texas and growing all the time, it should make sense that there's at least enough plastic resource to build a floating island like I'm describing. They could fashion the plastic into rafts or barges maybe too. It would make sense to try to do something with the plastic that is collectible "on site" rather than to transport it and then process it back on land. The time and expense and fuel involved to haul everything back to shore a boatload at at time is unimaginable.
Since plastic doesn't biodegrade, our only choice is to recycle as much of it as we can and reuse it for something that won't be mistaken for food. Plastic packaging is at an all time high these days. Where is all that new stuff going to go when we're done with it? We need to get away from that method of packaging or start using different materials. Don't they make a 'plastic' type product out of soy now?
It's that or just let the problem get worse and kill all the fish, marine birds and marine mammals in the sea. Then we're next.
What do you guys think? How would you get rid of this problem?
Plastic trash swept up by booms on the Los Angeles River - photo by the Algalita Marine Research Foundation.
I've gone from British Columbia to Hawaii on a boat several times and about halfway there I've seen the area described. It takes about a day and a half to get through it. It's not a solid mass of wall-to-wall plastic or anything, but there is a lot of stuff floating around (mostly bottles and styrofoam). I'm guessing most of the stuff is dumped from ships.