Captain Charles Moore on the seas of plastic

221,484 views ・ 2009-02-25

TED


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00:12
Let's talk trash.
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00:14
You know, we had to be taught
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to renounce the powerful conservation ethic
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we developed during the Great Depression and World War II.
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00:23
After the war, we needed to direct our enormous production capacity
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00:26
toward creation of products for peacetime.
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00:29
Life Magazine helped in this effort
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00:32
by announcing the introduction of throwaways
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00:35
that would liberate the housewife from the drudgery of doing dishes.
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00:38
Mental note to the liberators:
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00:40
throwaway plastics take a lot of space and don't biodegrade.
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00:43
Only we humans make waste that nature can't digest.
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00:48
Plastics are also hard to recycle.
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00:51
A teacher told me how to express the under-five-percent
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00:54
of plastics recovered in our waste stream.
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00:57
It's diddly-point-squat.
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01:00
That's the percentage we recycle.
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01:06
Now, melting point has a lot to do with this.
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01:09
Plastic is not purified by the re-melting process like glass and metal.
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01:12
It begins to melt below the boiling point of water
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01:15
and does not drive off the oily contaminants
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01:18
for which it is a sponge.
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01:21
Half of each year's 100 billion pounds of thermal plastic pellets
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01:24
will be made into fast-track trash.
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01:27
A large, unruly fraction of our trash
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will flow downriver to the sea.
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01:33
Here is the accumulation at Biona Creek next to the L.A. airport.
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01:36
And here is the flotsam near California State University Long Beach
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01:41
and the diesel plant we visited yesterday.
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01:43
In spite of deposit fees,
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01:45
much of this trash leading out to the sea will be plastic beverage bottles.
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01:48
We use two million of them in the United States every five minutes,
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01:52
here imaged by TED presenter Chris Jordan,
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who artfully documents mass consumption and zooms in for more detail.
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02:01
Here is a remote island repository for bottles
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off the coast of Baja California.
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02:08
Isla San Roque is an uninhabited bird rookery
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off Baja's sparsely populated central coast.
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02:12
Notice that the bottles here have caps on them.
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02:15
Bottles made of polyethylene terephthalate, PET,
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02:19
will sink in seawater and not make it this far from civilization.
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02:22
Also, the caps are produced in separate factories
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02:25
from a different plastic, polypropylene.
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02:28
They will float in seawater,
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02:30
but unfortunately do not get recycled under the bottle bills.
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02:34
Let's trace the journey of the millions of caps
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02:37
that make it to sea solo.
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02:39
After a year the ones from Japan are heading straight across the Pacific,
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02:42
while ours get caught in the California current
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02:45
and first head down to the latitude of Cabo San Lucas.
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02:48
After ten years, a lot of the Japanese caps
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02:51
are in what we call the Eastern Garbage Patch,
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02:53
while ours litter the Philippines.
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02:55
After 20 years, we see emerging the debris accumulation zone
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of the North Pacific Gyre.
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03:01
It so happens that millions of albatross
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nesting on Kure and Midway atolls
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in the Northwest Hawaiian Islands National Monument
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forage here and scavenge whatever they can find
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for regurgitation to their chicks.
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03:13
A four-month old Laysan Albatross chick
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died with this in its stomach.
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03:19
Hundreds of thousands of the goose-sized chicks are dying
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03:24
with stomachs full of bottle caps and other rubbish,
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03:27
like cigarette lighters ...
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but, mostly bottle caps.
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03:33
Sadly, their parents mistake bottle caps for food
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03:36
tossing about in the ocean surface.
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03:39
The retainer rings for the caps
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03:41
also have consequences for aquatic animals.
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03:44
This is Mae West,
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03:46
still alive at a zookeeper's home in New Orleans.
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03:49
I wanted to see what my home town of Long Beach was contributing to the problem,
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so on Coastal Clean-Up Day in 2005
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I went to the Long Beach Peninsula, at the east end of our long beach.
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03:59
We cleaned up the swaths of beach shown.
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04:02
I offered five cents each for bottle caps.
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04:05
I got plenty of takers.
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04:07
Here are the 1,100 bottle caps they collected.
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04:10
I thought I would spend 20 bucks.
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04:13
That day I ended up spending nearly 60.
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04:16
I separated them by color
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04:18
and put them on display the next Earth Day
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at Cabrillo Marine Aquarium in San Pedro.
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Governor Schwarzenegger and his wife Maria stopped by to discuss the display.
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04:26
In spite of my "girly man" hat, crocheted from plastic shopping bags,
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they shook my hand. (Laughter)
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04:33
I showed him and Maria a zooplankton trawl
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04:36
from the gyre north of Hawaii
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04:39
with more plastic than plankton.
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04:41
Here's what our trawl samples from the plastic soup our ocean has become look like.
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04:46
Trawling a zooplankton net on the surface for a mile
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produces samples like this.
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04:52
And this.
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04:55
Now, when the debris washes up on the beaches of Hawaii
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it looks like this.
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05:00
And this particular beach is Kailua Beach,
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the beach where our president and his family vacationed before moving to Washington.
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Now, how do we analyze samples like this one
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that contain more plastic than plankton?
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05:11
We sort the plastic fragments into different size classes,
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from five millimeters to one-third of a millimeter.
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05:17
Small bits of plastic concentrate persistent organic pollutants
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05:21
up to a million times their levels in the surrounding seawater.
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05:25
We wanted to see if the most common fish in the deep ocean,
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05:28
at the base of the food chain,
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was ingesting these poison pills.
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05:32
We did hundreds of necropsies,
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05:35
and over a third had polluted plastic fragments in their stomachs.
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05:38
The record-holder, only two-and-a-half inches long,
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had 84 pieces in its tiny stomach.
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05:44
Now, you can buy certified organic produce.
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05:47
But no fishmonger on Earth
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can sell you a certified organic wild-caught fish.
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This is the legacy we are leaving to future generations.
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06:00
The throwaway society cannot be contained --
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it has gone global.
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06:06
We simply cannot store and maintain or recycle all our stuff.
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06:09
We have to throw it away.
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06:11
Now, the market can do a lot for us,
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06:14
but it can't fix the natural system in the ocean we've broken.
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06:17
All the king's horses and all the king's men ...
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06:20
will never gather up all the plastic and put the ocean back together again.
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06:26
Narrator (Video): The levels are increasing,
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06:28
the amount of packaging is increasing,
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06:30
the "throwaway" concept of living is proliferating,
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06:33
and it's showing up in the ocean.
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06:36
Anchor: He offers no hope of cleaning it up.
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06:39
Straining the ocean for plastic
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06:42
would be beyond the budget of any country
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06:45
and it might kill untold amounts of sea life in the process.
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06:48
The solution, Moore says, is to stop the plastic at its source:
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stop it on land before it falls in the ocean.
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06:58
And in a plastic-wrapped and packaged world,
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07:01
he doesn't hold out much hope for that, either.
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07:04
This is Brian Rooney for Nightline,
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in Long Beach, California.
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07:12
Charles Moore: Thank you.
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