Boyan Slat – The New Picture of the Great Pacific Garbage Patch (2018)
1.8 trillion pieces of plastic weighing 80,000 metric tons are currently afloat in an area known as the Great Pacific Garbage Patch – and it is rapidly getting worse. These are the main conclusions of a three year mapping effort conducted by The Ocean Cleanup Research team.
Post Series: Netherlands
- 1.Wildlife-Friendly Motorways
- 2.Globally Great – Dutch Sustainability
- 3.How Dutch Innovation and Research feeds the World
- 4.The Netherlands and United States: Tackling Climate and Energy Challenges through Innovation
- 5.Water Management – The Delta Approach
- 6.Witness the Installation of a Giant GE Wind Turbine in the Netherlands
- 7.A 22-year-old has raised $30M to fund his idea behind cleaning up plastic in the ocean
- 8.Ocean cleanup: Dutch group to rid Great Pacific Garbage Patch of trash in 2018 – TomoNews
- 9.Boyan Slat – The New Picture of the Great Pacific Garbage Patch (2018)
- 10.Dutch scientists close to ‘breakthrough’ method of growing crops in deserts
- 11.Test-tube burgers and the future of meat | Earthrise
- 12.How Australia Impounded the World’s Second-Largest Fishing Trawler
- 13.Experimenting on Animals: Inside The Monkey Lab
- 14.WUR Alternatives for animal testing
- 15.Organ-on-chips: the power of combination | Berend van Meer | TEDxYouth@ISH
- 16.Budel Solar Farm, Netherlands
- 17.Could indoor farming help address food shortages?
- 18.Netherlands farm works to adapt to climate change effects
- 19.Bart Weetjens: How I taught rats to sniff out land mines
- 20.Flight of the Starlings: Watch This Eerie but Beautiful Phenomenon | Short Film Showcase
- 21.The Netherlands: Worlds Biggest Tax Haven?