Photo: An artist’s illustration shows three examples of systems that can capture plastic waste from rivers (Nicolle Fuller, SAYO-ART)
By Shelly Leachman, UC Santa Barbara
It has been estimated that 8 million tons of plastic waste enter the ocean each year, with that number growing annually. Where is it all coming from?
Among other places, rivers. In fact, research suggests that a small number of rivers contribute a disproportionately large amount of plastic waste that flows into the ocean — and do so at a collective rate of as much as 275 tons every hour.
Photo: Plastic waste accumulated in the Mekong River in Southeast Asia (Shutterstock)
It’s adding up. And it’s creating major challenges for fish that are important sources of seafood and for other forms of ocean life, including sea turtles, sea birds and whales.
Now, the Benioff Ocean Initiative, a center for applied ocean research based at UC Santa Barbara, is partnering with The Coca-Cola Foundation to fund a plastic waste capture system in a major polluting river. Each partner will contribute $1.5 million to form a $3 million fund for an interdisciplinary team to launch a system that will curb the flow of plastics from river to ocean. Captured plastic waste will be recycled, re-used or disposed of responsibly.
“I’m really excited about this partnership,” said Douglas McCauley, director of the Benioff Ocean Initiative and an associate professor of marine science. “UC Santa Barbara has been a leader in research efforts to understand the scope of the problem of plastic waste in the ocean and we are thrilled now to take a lead role in doing something about this important issue.”
The significant amount of plastic waste that flows into the ocean through a small number of rivers provides an opportunity to turn a problem into a strategic solution, the partners in the new endeavor agreed.
“The Coca-Cola Foundation’s support for the University of California Santa Barbara’s Benioff Ocean Initiative will not only enable the development of innovative applications to clean up river plastic, but also the recycling of the materials collected through the pilot project,” said Helen Smith Price, vice president of global community affairs and president of the Coca-Cola Foundation.
To launch the effort, the Benioff Ocean Initiative released a Request for Proposals that invites teams to submit ideas for a pilot river plastics capture project. Applicants are required to describe how the data collected by their river plastic waste capture system could be used to inspire change in plastic waste production and waste management system improvements.
“Not only do we want to build something that will immediately pull more plastic waste out of our rivers and our oceans,” said McCauley, “but we want to use the data and the story surrounding this captured plastic waste to help create the change we need to turn off the tap of plastic getting into our rivers.”
Conversations about initiating a river plastics interception project began with a research symposium held at UC Santa Barbara in 2018. The event brought together world experts in hydrology, industrial ecology, watershed governance and riverine engineering, as well as thought leaders from non-governmental organizations and the private industry. Similar coalitions of researchers, engineers and environmental leaders are expected to apply for the Request for Proposals.
The Benioff Ocean Initiative was founded in 2016 with an initial gift of $10 million from Lynne and Marc Benioff, chairman and co-CEO of Salesforce. The experimental enterprise aims to combine university researchers, students and global ocean communities to identify problems and solve them with emerging technologies.
What a bunch of arrogant, pat-self-on-the-back nonsense. We don’t throw our garbage into our oceans and rivers. Asia and Africa do. 90% of the plastic in the ocean comes from Africa and Asia. Everybody knows that. There’s nothing to study. Go to the source.
Couldn’t disagree more. I see a lot of plastic trash in my neighborhood, and I don’t see any reason why a bunch of it doesn’t end up in the ocean. Unless the leprechauns come out at night and pick it up? Blaming the 3rd world countries for a problem created by the 1st world isn’t going to fix anything. Stories in the news right now include illegal shipments of our 1st world plastic to the Phillipines and Malaysia, where it has a huge negative impact on the environment.
Psychological projection at its finest.
12:49 I would happily change the color of my text if I could figure out how to do so. I’ve looked under my account but I haven’t been able to find any means of changing it. I think those options are only available when you sign up for your account. I was trying to have my name appear as orange, not all my text. Ah well. Sorry for the difficulty in reading my comments.
Green and orange, I just figured you were honoring your Irish heritage! I don’t find it hard to read.
Rivers can contribute to trash in the ocean, esp. after big rains but there are countries that dump all their trash in the ocean. I dove the entire coast from Rincon to pt. Conception as a sea urchin diver and I did not see much trash. I dove everywhere on the channel islands too and saw even less trash. The big garbage patch in the middle of the ocean is created by dumping in the ocean, not littering on the land.