The Great Pacific Garbage Patch seem to have 16 times more plastic than previously believed
The Great Pacific Garbage Patch is a gyre of marine debris particles in the central North Pacific Ocean. This gyre has been known to host a lot of plastic due to the nature of the currents that carry plastic and other man-made objects from the shores where they are dumped, to one of the major gyres such as this one.
Not all plastic in the ocean ends up on the beach, and much of it gets stuck in a gyre. Image by epSos.de, posted with the Creative Commons Attribution 2.0 Generic license.
Despite popular belief, this "plastic island" is not really something that you can see with your eyes. It is in fact just an area in the ocean where the density of plastic waste is much higher than the rest of the ocean. New estimates suggest that there are about 1.8 trillion pieces of plastic in this patch, which sounds like it's plastic everywhere, but you have to keep in mind that the patch is estimated to be twice the size of Texas.
What I wanted to share today is a brand new scientific article that have been looking at how much plastic that is actually found in this Great Pacific Garbage Patch, and as the title say, it's as much as 16 times more than previously believed!
How the research team measured the plastic in The Great Pacific Garbage Patch
There have been many attempts to find out exactly how much plastic there is in The Great Pacific Garbage Patch, and up until now researchers have been hiring boats that were trawling nets that were originally used to catch plankton. These nets would be trawling behind the boat while the researchers collected their samples, and repeated many times to get a good average number.
The big problem with using these plankton nets is that while they are good for microplastic, they don't really catch buoys, plastic bottles and other waste of this size, which obviously affected the results pretty heavily. This lead to there being a lot of estimations, and the different research groups got vastly different results based on their estimations.
The new research from a group of international scientists lead by The Ocean Cleanup foundation recently attempted a different approach. They did not settle for only one boat with one net, but rather hired 18 boats and attached a total of 652 nets of different sizes to get all the differently sized plastic particles.
A nice view of all the sites where the research team trawled nets and did aerial photos. By L. Lebreton et. al. Image is posted with the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
In addition to this they conducted aircraft surveys, and used a total of 7,300 photographs to better estimate the number of large plastic particles in the region.
The sum of it all is a study that is most likely a lot more accurate than the previous studies, but the bad news is that their estimations of the mass of the plastic waste is 16 times higher than the previously agreed upon number.
A closer look at the numbers
The research gave us some interesting numbers to look at, so let's take a closer look at them.
- There is an estimated 1,800,000,000,000 pieces of plastic in the patch. In words, this is 1.8 trillion pieces, or almost 250 pieces per human being on the planet!
- The size of the patch is between 700,000 square kilometres and 15,000,000 square kilometres, so the density of the plastic particles is not all that high, but much higher than the rest of the ocean.
The North Pacific Subtropical Convergence Zone. These currents bring the plastic to the Great Pacific Garbage Patch. Image is Public Domain.
- Over 99.9 % of the trash in the patch is made up from plastic polymers, so plastic really is the biggest perpetrator.
- Microplastics make up over 94 % of the plastic pieces, but only account for 8 % of the total mass of the plastic.
- Megaplastics (5cm+) is responsible for 75 % of the mass, with the intermediates accounting for the rest.
- A pieces of plastic that was inspected by the research team during the study was found to be from 1977, which shows how long it takes for it to degrade naturally!
Will The Ocean Cleanup foundation be able to clean up the patch?
The Ocean Cleanup foundation got bigger plans than just estimating the mass of the patch - they also want to clean it up! This is a huge favor to the marine life in the North Pacific Ocean, and pretty much all humans on earth who enjoys having a healthy ocean, and their goal is to clean up 50 % of the patch within the next five years.
This is a huge undertaking, and hope to raise $370 million in from corporations to finance the cleanup. This project sounds a little bit too optimistic to me, but I hope to be proven wrong about my skepticism!
Thanks for reading
The entire scientific article is available for free, so check if out if you're like my and loves to see the original sources for yourself.
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Hi @Valth
I have read about The ocean clean up project. Didn't they adapt an ide that a young guy from The Netherlands came up with and were a plan to build a lot of huge "plastic traps" and send them out in the ocean to circle around and collect floating plastic? Think they was planed to be out in 6 months at the time before being emptied and then sendt out on another 6 months period.
Hey @gyldenhorn.
Yes, you remember correctly :) I think the technology has change a bit since their inception, but they still have big plans to clean up all the plastic. I just hope they are able to get the funding they need to test it out.
This issue really is alarming but seems like our governments are not doing something about this. They are more busy with wars and more exploitation. This issue is not juat an issue by the way. This is reality.
I think a lot of the problem behind this is that no single government owns the area where the plastic waste is located, so they expect someone else to fix the problem.
U write this awarness post just bcz its EARTH DAY today?
Naa then this not going to sort out this issue.. We need to work individually on this problem.. Public awarenes time to time can work.This is common issue everywhere.. I think we must start from us and work sincencerly on this..
I try to write these types of awareness posts pretty often actually, because plastic is a huge problem for the entire world, so I'm doing my best to tell people about the issues ;)
It does sound optimistic but it's worth a try. I hope they'll be able to do what they claim
Yeah, I hope so as well :)
The Ocean Cleanup foundation be not able to clean up
the patch alone...We can take several steps to prevent
plastic pollution..I think, At first we We must be aware
of plastic patch ...Than said to Others have to be aware of this.
Yeah, awareness is a good thing, but we also need to take action to remove all these trillions of plastic pieces that we have already thrown away. I believe that we need both awareness and action if we ever want to save the ocean.
There is enrmous amount of garbage and plastic in world and ocean and it could be of benefit and can be harmful. But its upto us how to use it . Wether in useful manner or just to waste. It can be recycled . Research team have done a great job. Impressive article.
Yeah, it's way too much plastic out there! We really need to solve this in one way or another.
Yes exactly
How selfish and stupid we human beings are, aint we know what goes around comes around.
Hehe, yeah, that's true.
There is an estimated 1,800,000,000,000 pieces of plastic in the patch. In words, this is 1.8 trillion pieces, or almost 250 pieces per human being on the planet!
My God how careless and selfish are we, we humans only care about ourselves not about the Mother Earth, who sustains us by the will of God. Who dumps this much of plastic at a single place, where are the fuckin recycling plants? , don't they work anymore? , are they even practical? or they are just mentioned on our text books which we read when we are at primary schools. If action isn't took immediately our future generations will suffer a lot.
I agree with your saying
incredible pieces of plastic a lot of friends.
Sure :)
Thats really bad stuff to dirty the atmoshpere
Yes, but I don't think the plastic from the ocean will ever reach the atmosphere.