Plastic retention in front of the extended cork line, from System 001/B. The “Maersk Launcher”, which towed the assembly to the Great Pacific Garbage Patch, observes from a distance. Photo: The Ocean Cleanup
Plastic retention in front of the extended cork line, from System 001/B. The Maersk Launcher, which towed the assembly to the Great Pacific Garbage Patch, observes from a distance. Photo: The Ocean Cleanup

2 October 2019 (The Ocean Cleanup) — Today, we announced that System 001/B is successfully capturing and collecting plastic debris. After one year of testing, we have succeeded in developing a self-contained system in the Great Pacific Garbage Patch that is using the natural forces of the ocean to passively catch and concentrate plastic, thereby confirming the most important principle behind the cleanup concept that was first presented by Boyan Slat at a TEDx conference in October 2012.

Launched from Vancouver in June, System 001/B is The Ocean Cleanup’s second attempt to prove its concept of collecting garbage from the Great Pacific Garbage Patch, the largest accumulation zone of plastic in the world’s oceans. In addition to collecting plainly visible pieces of plastic debris, as well as much larger ghost nets associated with commercial fishing, System 001/B has also successfully captured microplastics as small as 1mm – a feat we were pleasantly surprised to achieve.

Diagram showing the System 001/B parachute configuration for collecting ocean plastic. Graphic: The Ocean Cleanup
Diagram showing the System 001/B parachute configuration for collecting ocean plastic. Graphic: The Ocean Cleanup

“After beginning this journey seven years ago, this first year of testing in the unforgivable environment of the high seas strongly indicates that our vision is attainable and that the beginning of our mission to rid the ocean of plastic garbage, which has accumulated for decades, is within our sights,” said Boyan Slat.

“Our team has remained steadfast in its determination to solve immense technical challenges to arrive at this point. Though we still have much more work to do, I am eternally grateful for the team’s commitment and dedication to the mission and look forward to continuing to the next phase of development.”

On Wednesday, 2 October 2019, we went live to share an important update about our cleanup system in the Great Pacific Garbage Patch. Tune in to hear the news firsthand and participate in a Q&A with Boyan Slat and the team. Video: The Ocean Cleanup

New design leads to improved performance

The aim of System 001/B was to trial modifications, which addressed known complications, primarily aimed at correcting the inconsistent speed difference between the system and the plastic. Consistency was achieved by slowing down the system with a parachute sea anchor, allowing for faster-moving plastic debris to float into the system. Once this main challenge was resolved, prominent plastic overtopping was observed – becoming the next technical challenge to solve. Due to the modularity of System 001/B, a modification to increase the size of the cork line was designed and implemented while the system was offshore. With the new cork line, minimal overtopping is now being observed, thus allowing the system to capture and concentrate the plastic.

Aerial views of the “Maersk Launcher” and the System 001/B plastic-capturing boom deployed in the Great Pacific Garbage Patch, from June to August 2019. Photo: The Ocean Cleanup
Aerial views of the Maersk Launcher and the System 001/B plastic-capturing boom deployed in the Great Pacific Garbage Patch, from June to August 2019. Photo: The Ocean Cleanup

The mission continues

Despite the early success of System 001/B, there is still much work to do. With new learnings and experience derived from the successful deployment of System 001/B, The Ocean Cleanup will now begin to design its next ocean cleanup system, System 002; a full-scale cleanup system that is able to both endure and retain the collected plastic for long periods of time.

Once fully operational, The Ocean Cleanup will return plastic to land for recycling. The timing of that phase of the mission is contingent upon further testing and design iteration.

The Ocean Cleanup successfully catches plastic in the great pacific garbage patch