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Old 07-21-2009, 08:35 AM   #1
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Default Project Kaisei - Capturing The Pacific Garbage Vortex

I heard about the huge PLASTIC, garbage vortex a while back, from an acquaintance who lived on Maui. It's visible from space. Maybe this expedition will have some luck figuring out what to do with it. There’s also an 18 minute video on the link [Sylvia Earle, "Explorer-in-Residence,” National Geographic, Mission Programs].
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From the website
Project Kaisei consists of a team of innovators, scientists, environmentalists, ocean lovers, sailors, and sports enthusiasts who have come together with a common purpose. To study the North Pacific Gyre and the marine debris that has collected in this oceanic region, to determine how to capture the debris and to study the possible retrieval and processing techniques that could be potentially employed to detoxify and recycle these materials into diesel fuel. This first research expedition, scheduled for the summer of 2009, will be critical to understanding the logistics that would be needed to launch future clean-up operations and testing existing technologies that have never been utilized under oceanic conditions.




Project Kaisei will examine the largest area of the Plastic Vortex, an ocean gyre, situated to the North East of Hawaii, and approximately five days by boat from the United States (San Francisco area). The expedition will consist of a large pass through the Plastic Vortex, with the aim to collect and study plastic and other debris forms from the ocean in order to showcase some of the new technologies that will be used for processing and recycling.
The Project Kaisei team will embark on a multi-week expedition to the “Plastic Vortex” from the West Coast in order to:

• Study and document the marine debris found in this area of the Pacific Ocean;
• Test catch methods for removing the debris;
• Conduct research on the chemical interactions of marine debris in the gyre and select fishes and wildlife related to persistent organic pollutants (POPs);
• Understand the needs required to undertake an eventual large scale clean-up of the waste material; and
• Test technologies for conversion into an economically viable by-product: diesel fuel.

http://www.projectkaisei.org/

THE IMPOSSIBLE MISSIONS ARE THE ONLY ONES WHICH SUCCEED. -JACQUES COUSTEAU

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