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The great garbage swirl


A patch of plastic twice the size of Texas is floating in the Pacific. Maui's Rich Owen wants to clean it up.


January 29, 2009
The horse latitudes are known for dead wind. They lie between the 30th and 35th latitudinal parallels, across the globe, above and below the equator. Their name supposedly comes from the days when Spanish merchant ships, bound for the West Indies, would practically screech to a halt upon crossing the area’s threshold and, to lighten their load and conserve water, would push overboard the horses they had brought along. (The Doors’ Jim Morrison wrote a creepy poem about the practice for the album Strange Days.)

While they’re no longer the gravesite of countless unfortunate horses, the horse latitudes are now home to a new menace born of unfettered commercial striving: the Great Pacific Garbage Patch.

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Satellite photos don't do the swirl justice, because a lot of it's underwater.
This dry, windless area is dominated by the Northern Pacific Gyre, a wind current that encircles an area twice the size of the continental United States. This ribbon of wind traps floating debris, mostly plastic, in a perpetual clockwise swirl. Part of this massive patch sits between Hawaii and the Mainland.

Rich Owen of the Environmental Cleanup Coalition, a Maui-based organization that is launching the beginnings of a cleanup effort for the area, said he first heard of the gyre from a friend.

“Literally my stomach just started getting in knots,” the scuba instructor says. “I felt ill.”

Owen had noticed an alarming volume of plastic in and around the water during a trip to Southeast Asia.

“I actually saw a fish shit a piece of plastic when I was in Bali,” he says.

It was enough to inspire Owen to look into the patch and ways to clean it up. The ECC’s Gyre Cleanup Project is still in the larval stage, but a public awareness campaign, including a benefit this Saturday at the Iao Theater, is quickly spreading the word.

“When I look at the Earth as a whole I look at the ocean as the earth’s blood,” Rich said. “It’s where life began.”

It takes less than a year for trash to travel from Asian waters to the patch and up to five years from the America’s west coast. Eighty percent of it comes from land; the other 20 percent comes from seafaring vessels. But it all gets trapped in the horse latitudes.

Items found include hard hats, toothbrushes, bottle caps and kayaks. Much of the debris has broken down into tiny fragments, researchers say, and fish and birds in the area are ingesting them.

Sea captain and ocean researcher Charles Moore said in a 2008 NPR interview that the area of the garbage patch itself is estimated to be twice the size of Texas, and growing every day. Moore motored through it during a trans-Pacific sailboat race in the early ‘90s and was appalled by what he saw, saying that, in the week that it took to pass through the area he “was confronted, as far as the eye could see, with the sight of plastic.”

Yet you can’t see it in satellite photos, according to Algalita.com, the Web site of the organization for which Moore conducts research, because the debris is more “soup” than continent. Instead of forming a trash island, a literal wasteland on the surface, plastic fragments permeate the sea to great depths. And researchers say it doubles in size every time they go out there, which is on average every two years.

Algalita is studying the impacts of such a high concentration of plastic—and the toxic chemicals some plastics emit as a result of photodegredation, or breaking down—on the marine life in the area, among other things.

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While the full extent of the patch’s detriment has yet to be quantified, Owen says it’s time to get to work.

“Leaving the trash in the ocean is not an option,” he says.

The ECC will be launching a research effort to find the most effective means of cleaning this menacingly large environmental hazard. Among Owen’s ideas are nets that would catch the larger pieces but allow marine life to escape. Owen says that researchers will also explore ways to repopulate the area.

But before all of this happens, Owen’s nonprofit will be raising funds like crazy.

Saturday’s event will not just serve to educate the public by way of a PowerPoint presentation. He’s also got a killer musical lineup slated. Performers like George Kahomoku Jr., Divino, Blane Lyon and Alana Cini will all do their part, and local artists will be selling their work to benefit the project.

It’s an unfathomably huge task, one that nonbelievers say can’t be tackled. Some researchers say our best bet is to curb our plastic use. But Owen isn’t fazed by critics or the hugeness of this undertaking. Maybe someday soon, the horse latitudes will be known for something positive. MTW

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  1. print email
    Where do you put it?
    April 22, 2009 | 06:07 PM

    Lets say you get the floating equipment to start the clean and you fill up a few barges, then what. You are going to cringe at this, everyone does at first. I suggest that inland Antartica, where nothing lives, in the mountains, are frozen valleys that would take centuries to fill. I know, I know, it makes me sick to but where else on Earth can you put this stuff without affecting the living.

    JJ Stanton
  2. print email
    Is Recycling this Plastic Feasible?
    April 22, 2009 | 06:47 PM

    Since the plastic is breaking down already, why can't it be recycled to make other plastic bottles, bags, etc? This news is very depressing, and a bit scary, especially if we are considering just "throwing it away" *again* in Antarctica for the next generations to solve this problem?

    K Wilson
  3. print email
    There Must Be an Answer
    April 22, 2009 | 06:58 PM

    Is there no way to retrieve the plastic and reform into usable products? It seems hard to believe we would just let "it" continue to float out there and rely on mankind to do the right thing and curb use of plastics. We all know how wonderful we are at limits and moderation.

    k swartz
  4. print email
    This is unimaginable
    April 22, 2009 | 07:03 PM

    I still cannot wrap m head around this.... there is no way we should move it from area to another.... We should find ways to start recycling this stuff. I mean I saw tires, car doors... this is crazy

    andrew
  5. print email
    space junk.....ocean junk
    April 22, 2009 | 07:26 PM

    you think the ocean trash is bad then what about all the debris circling the earth.........we humans are spoiled greedy beasts......we cant clean up after ourseleves..........we waste our resourses.......we are killing the earth and our future generations........

    BeGood
  6. print email
    Time to get to work...
    April 22, 2009 | 08:07 PM

    I am sure if there was an area the size of Texas that was filled with cod it would be fished and cleared out in no time. So I am sure if we chose to, we can get rid of this as well.....

    C.C.
  7. print email
    IDIOCRACY
    April 23, 2009 | 06:23 AM

    Have you all seen the movie IDIOCRACY because that is what is gonna happen if WE as human being don't put a stop to all of this

    JIM BOB
  8. print email
    Could it be something else?
    April 23, 2009 | 07:44 AM

    I've had religious people at my door from time to time and they read a scripture out of the Bible that went like this, "God will bring to ruin those runing the earth". I looked it up and it's there. It's Revelation 11:18. I'd say the earth is well on it's way to getting ruined and I'm thinking mankind's balking at giving up plastic bag, driving cars and melting the artic is going to be nothing compared to what we're setting ourselves up for.

    La-la Land
  9. print email
    It could be something else!
    April 23, 2009 | 08:44 AM

    It is something else! It was most likely one of Jehovah’s Witnesses that read that scripture to you. The next time one of us comes to your door please ask them about the book called, “What does the Bible Really Teach?” You’ll be pleasantly surprised to find that no matter how bad things look right now, there will be a happy outcome for not only the earth and all it’s beauties, but a happy outcome mankind as well!

    ShariQ
  10. print email
    Lets get organized!!
    April 23, 2009 | 07:11 PM

    I say lets stop talking about it and get orgaized to clean it up!!! Everyone with a boat can and pitch it!! Recycle people!! We know they can recycle so much stuff so lets get going!!



    Maria B.
  11. print email
    Lets get organized!!
    April 23, 2009 | 07:16 PM

    I say lets stop talking about it and get orgaized to clean it up!!! Everyone with a boat can and pitch it!! Recycle people!! We know they can recycle so much stuff so lets get going!!



    Maria B.
  12. print email
    Read C.C
    April 28, 2009 | 08:20 PM

    Just read C.C., i am even using his idea in a project.


    A C.C. Fan
  13. print email
    Waste-to-energy
    April 30, 2009 | 02:21 PM

    What's needed is a cleanup vessel that can be powered by the plastic garbage. Manned by a rotating crew of volunteers, the mission is self-sustaining until the trash runs out.

    Theodore
  14. print email
    There is no gyre
    April 30, 2009 | 06:41 PM

    "born of unfettered commercial striving"? Where was the editor, asleep?

    Guys, there is no gyre. Bali is not the gyre. If satellites don't see it, how come Moore did?

    Use Your Brain
  15. print email
    Mother Earths Wonder
    May 01, 2009 | 08:23 AM

    Nice that She makes it 'easy' for us to clean up. Incredible really, to me. It's rotating? Perhaps we could suspend stationary nets, going with the problem instead of against it.

    Stanby
  16. print email
    Ignoring the Truth
    May 17, 2009 | 11:52 PM

    yea sure "Use your Brain." Let's ignore or pretend the whole thing is a scam. To what end??? What is the purpose of making it up??? Look around your own home and see how much plastic you have in your own little world, in just one room, and then ask yourself where is it all gonna end up.

    Troubled
  17. print email
    Trash Island
    May 21, 2009 | 03:01 PM

    Who actually owns Trash Island? Does Rich Own it?

    John
  18. print email
    Recycle the Energy
    May 26, 2009 | 02:19 PM

    Most plastics are extensive hydrocarbon chains. If used as a source of heat (burning), they would give off CO2 and H2O. Since the oceans are the worlds CO2 sink, scrubbing the CO2 produced with ocean water should increase the production of phytoplankton, the basis of most of the oceans food chain. Oxygen consumed by the process should be replaced by the O2 produced by the phytoplankton, or sunlight could be used to reduce ocean water to O2 and H2, and H2 used for fuel cells.

    DC
  19. print email
    Yo
    June 29, 2009 | 06:16 PM

    u moms a garbage swirl

    A highly mature, wise and intellectual individua
  20. print email
    Quantify the Problem
    July 07, 2009 | 07:25 PM

    I did a few calculations. I made a few assumptions. Assumption 1 is that the Pacific Garbage Patch is the area of Texas and 10 feet deep. Assumption 2 is that it is roughly 1/2 the density of the average landfill. Assumption 3 is that we could have enough ships to support a ground crew for hauling the garbage to a landfill.

    The size of the problem is on the order of a metropolitan county landfill system. I chose Orange County Landfill as my model of comparison. In my model, the limiting factor was the ability of the landfill(s) to accept garbage.

    To clean up the Pacific Garbage Patch would take 20-25 yrs assuming the a landfill system the size of Orange County Landfill operating at the rate it has operated for 2000-2005. Once again, this assumes there is a fleet of garbage collecting ships that can deliver garbage at the rate the landfills can process.

    Now that the problem has been quantified, please provide adjustments to the quanification. We can also now talk intelligently about how to solve the problem.

    Dave
  21. print email
    Quantify the Problem
    July 07, 2009 | 07:28 PM

    Oh yeah, I forgot to mention $$$. What is the going rate for a cubic yard of garbage?


    Dave
  22. print email
    big problem - big solution
    July 10, 2009 | 05:14 AM

    The solution is to recycle and use the material on site, i.e at sea. My concept is to collect the materials - apparently mostly plastics, then while sailing toward New Guinea manufacture frames for giant (several acres) floating islands that can be seeded and sailed across the Pacific at the equator absorbing and sequestering massive amounts of carbon and heat. The pacific rim has a huge under employed fishing industry, and we are about to need a massive government program to put the worlds economy back to work - crisis / opportunity.

    Jim
  23. print email
    Possible solution . . . ?
    July 14, 2009 | 01:07 PM

    Nuke it.

    j.
  24. print email
    bull
    July 22, 2009 | 02:04 PM

    Why are their no pictures of this great mysterious garbage patch? Not even 1! oooo I know why... IT DOESN'T EXIST YOU LEMMINGS!

    Bobby Gootmilk
  25. print email
    hi,
    July 25, 2009 | 07:55 PM

    this is allen from molokai and i read your paper.
    talk to you later!

    allen
  26. print email
    what
    August 09, 2009 | 12:55 PM

    we can do is dzhast pray our dear lord. Simply glorify sweet dzhesus, and he will solve all the problems.

    universal truth ))
  27. print email
    Stop garbage from entering oceans & stop ships from dumping at s
    September 02, 2009 | 06:35 PM

    To those who say there is no Garbage Patch & there are no photos -- JUST GOOGLE IT & you'll see the HORRIBLE MESS !!!!!! I remember while taking a cruise to Bahamas in the late 1970s, being a night-owl, I saw the crew dumping ALL the ship's garbage in the Atlantic Ocean !!!!!! I spoke to the Capt. who feined ignorance to the dumping & when I returned to Miami I went to the Herald & reported what I saw & they poo-pooed it !!! I wrote NOAA & they said they knew of dumping & were "working" on it & did I have any photos? I didn't as I hadn't expected to see anything to photograph at 3A.M., I'd been WRONG !!!!!!! As life caught up with me I "forgot" about it, until recently when I first heard about the Great Eastern Pacific Garbage Patch !!!!! I was appalled & sickened to the point of being physically ill !!!!!!! I am sooooooooooo sorry I didn't try a lot harder to get SOMEONE to LISTEN to me back in the 70s !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
    I just hope to God that our scientists can come up with a way to effectively rid the earth of this garbage forever, b4 it's too late & it almost is !!!!!!!!
    I would not want to see it moved to Antartica as it would end up overheating the continent & causing even greater problems.
    Perhaps if we could compact it enough & find a feasable way to shoot it into the farthest reaches of deep space that would work as space is infinate (never ending). But we MUST stop making all but the most essential plastic (medical plastics = good, anything that can be made with nothing else & is necessary to protect & save lives would be OK, but other than that -- we go back to the OLD WAYS of GLASS & TIN & ALUMINUM) !!!!!!!!!!!! I remember when COKE came in a GLASS BOTTLE & tasted soooooooooooooo wonderful !!!! You drank it & returned the bottle for 5-cents !!!!! Milk can in GLASS BOTTLES, so did veggies & fruit, etc., etc. !!!!!!!!!!!! The OLD WAYS are usually the BEST WAYS !!!!!!!! I'll bet many of you have NEVER seen MILK or COKE in a GLASS BOTTLE, but believe me the TASTE is SOOOOOOOOO MUCH BETTER & I'll bet 100k-times healthier as I know that plastic leaches chemicals into whatever is put into it & we are screwing up our fabulous genes that took nature millions & millions of years to create & we've destroyed it in the years since plastics came into use about the time of WWII (1945+) !!!!!!! That's a mere 65 to 69 years to destroy the WORLD & OURSELVES !!!!!!!!!! BRILLIANT !!!!! follow the MONEY TRAIL !!!!!!!!!!!!!

    Barbara Barker -- S.W. FLA.
  28. print email
    stop the garbage!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
    September 10, 2009 | 05:23 AM

    we need to put a stop to this before it becomes bigger. If it does it could not be just threatining to humans but it could bring an end to the animals.

    coolestloser
  29. print email
    stop the garbage!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
    September 10, 2009 | 05:23 AM

    we need to put a stop to this before it becomes bigger. If it does it could not be just threatining to humans but it could bring an end to the animals.

    coolestloser
  30. print email
    MORTIFIED!
    November 05, 2009 | 09:12 PM

    I am from south africa and I saw this for the first time on Oprah yesterday and i was really mortified to hear that something like this exists.I'm sure that SOMETHING can be done,this should be taken up with the big wigs of your country,i'm sure they can afford to give up a percentage/take a cut in their salaries to fund this...but it is rather strange that there are no pictures as i have just googled it!?

    Nas,South Africa
  31. print email
    PICTUERS OF THE GARBAGE SWIRL
    November 05, 2009 | 09:35 PM

    Ok,I found the pics under the heading GARBAGE SWIRL PICTURES for anyone who wants to look at it but if you are a nature person it will upset you greatly

    Nas, S.Africa
  32. print email
    November 05, 2009 | 11:24 PM

    Hi Nas

    I also saw the great swirl on oprah yesterday!!!
    it's disguisting


    Russian. South Africa
  33. print email
    November 05, 2009 | 11:24 PM

    Hi Nas

    I also saw the great swirl on oprah yesterday!!!
    it's disguisting


    Russian. South Africa
  34. print email
    references
    December 15, 2009 | 01:17 PM

    Where is the proof? i have read articles that state that there is no "floating island of trash bigger than Texas" http://www.kpbs.org/news/2009/aug/27/scripps-scientists-exploring-great-pacific-garbage/ NOT TO SAY that our environmental impact is ridiculous... i just have a hard time believing this "trash island" exists without evidence. Extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence

    zack h
  35. print email
    Duffy Gorski
    December 29, 2009 | 12:27 PM

    My be ships crossing the ocean could scoop it up and use it for energy to run the ship it would be better then letting it float around and causing propblem.
    Love, Peace and God Bless
    www.humanracecommunity.com
    Duffy

    Duffy Gorski
  36. print email
    Who will foot the bill?
    December 31, 2009 | 11:05 AM

    I sincerly hope we will make enough progress in the comming years to get to the point when AMERICA insists that CHINA and JAPAN foot the bill for this clean up, because that's the elephant in the room and names nobody dares to voice here.
    Happy new year to all.

    George, Spain.
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