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Each year around a million tons of plastic filter into the ocean. Most of the plastic filters from rivers and later become part of larger garbage patches which get which get caught in a vortex of circulating currents. [1]This issue would continue to grow and increasingly impact our environment if no actions were taken. Boyan Slat is a Dutch inventor that founded The Ocean Cleanup at the age of 18 in his hometown of Delft, the Netherlands[2]. Slat proposed the cleanup project and supporting system in 2012. In October, Slat outlined the project in a TED-talk. Currently, The Ocean Cleanup team consists of more than 90 individuals and is composed of engineers, researchers, scientists and computational modelers that worked to improve the process' on the daily to combat ocean plastic pollution. The initial design consisted of long, floating barriers fixed to the seabed, attached to a central platform shaped like a manta ray for stability. The barriers would direct the floating plastic to the central platform, which would remove the plastic from the water. Slat did not specify the dimensions of this system in the talk.[3] The Ocean Cleanup was designed with the hopes of intercepting plastic waste before it exits rivers into the ocean. It is estimated that The Ocean Cleanup[4] will be able to remove 50% of the Great Pacific Garbage Patch every 5 years.

Pictured is the great pacific garbage patch which sits in the middle of the Pacific Ocean. This is the main cleanup target of the Ocean Cleanup Project.
  1. ^ "Eight Million Tons of Plastic Dumped in Ocean Every Year". National Geographic News. 2015-02-13. Retrieved 2020-11-16.
  2. ^ Lebreton, L.; Slat, B.; Ferrari, F.; Sainte-Rose, B.; Aitken, J.; Marthouse, R.; Hajbane, S.; Cunsolo, S.; Schwarz, A.; Levivier, A.; Noble, K. (2018-03-22). "Evidence that the Great Pacific Garbage Patch is rapidly accumulating plastic". Scientific Reports. 8 (1): 4666. doi:10.1038/s41598-018-22939-w. ISSN 2045-2322.
  3. ^ TEDx Talks (2012-10-24), How the oceans can clean themselves: Boyan Slat at TEDxDelft, retrieved 2018-09-09
  4. ^ "The Ocean Cleanup". The Ocean Cleanup. Retrieved 2020-11-02.