Los Angeles (ap)
Boyan Slat, who launched the Pacific Ocean cleanup project, said last week that the 2,000-foot long floating boom will be towed 800 miles to Hawaii. If it can’t be repaired there, it will be loaded on a barge and returned to Alameda, Calif.
The boom broke apart under constant wind and waves in the Pacific. Slat said he’s disappointed, but not discouraged and pledged that operations would resume as soon as possible.
“This is an entirely new category of machine that is out there in extremely challenging conditions,” the Dutch inventor said. “We always took into account that we might have to take it back and forth a few times”
The U-shaped barrier was towed to the Great Pacific Garbage Patch — an island of trash twice the size of Texas.
It had been in place since the end of October.
The plastic barrier with a tapered 10-foot-deep screen is intended to act like a coastline, trapping some of the 1.8 trillion pieces of plastic that scientists estimate are swirling in the patch while allowing marine life to safely swim beneath it.
Slat has said he hopes one day to deploy 60 of the devices to skim plastic debris off the surface of the ocean.
