DoBeGreen

we share environmental information

Sunday, Sep 05th

Last update04:38:25 PM GMT

You are here

Green Guide

 
 
Eco-Friendly Computing at Organizations
The objective of Green Computing just like other green initiatives is to reduce the usage of dangerous resources to boost energy efficiency and encourage recyclability and bio-degradability.

Read more
 
Geoengineering Our Climate Against Global Warming

The word ‘geoengineering’ is self-descriptive, i.e. it is a process of engineering (through technological and mechanical processes) changes in natural climatic conditions. To make it even simpler, Geoengineering refers to humans maneuvering the Earth’s climate for their advantage or for preventing climate-related calamities.

Read more...
 

Hartwell Paper—Seeking Solutions in wake of Copenhagen’s Debacle

Anubhav Kapoor

The Copenhagen Meet 2009 was unable to provide a unified platform to seek solutions for problems precipitated by the climate-change crisis. As a result, environmentalists and ecological conservationis...

Resolving your ‘Global Cooling’ Fears!

Anubhav Kapoor
Media coverage around the world seems overwhelmed with the theory that something parallel to the ‘Ice Age’, though a lot less extreme in terms of the intensity of freezing temperatures has been unleas...

Are consumers themselves suffocating green consumerism?

Anubhav Kapoor

Green lifestyle trends are being increasingly advocated around the world and every consumer-centric brand is becoming increasingly conscious of its ‘green’ image. Even the most conventional of consume...

Hotel in Rajasthan going green

Purva Bhandari

Fort Khejarla in Rajasthan, India has always been committed to sustainable development. Mr. Ramendra Bhandari, the Director believes every member of the team from the top-level Directors to the newest ...

Gustav Carlsson

Gustav Carlsson

Administrator
Gustav Carlsson-Finland-Swedish engineer and Geographes with the natural geography as a specialty. He lives in a medieval castle in France and divides his days between building boats and running Bed &...
Johan Ehrenberg

Johan Ehrenberg

Administrator

Johan Ehrenberg is CEO ETC Utveckling (production company), editor of the magazine ETC, CEO Egen El- alternative (electricity for domestic use, author etc...


Name: Johan Ehrenberg
Milk: Organic milk
Unkn...
Live Green, Die Green – Note on Greener Funerals

Live Green, Die Green – Note on Greener Funerals

Purva Bhandari
Almost 56 million people die every year with almost 155000 a day on average [1] . In addition to this, almost 1.6 tons of concrete is buried in the US while 16% of mercury emissions in UK are ...
Greener transportation

Greener transportation

Purva Bhandari
The need for transportation cannot be ignored. In all parts of the world, campaigns are being carried out to encourage people to use public transport and start car-pooling. However, using public trans...

Environmental Vegetarianism

Anubhav Kapoor

The entire world’s attention is focused towards the upcoming Copenhagen Meet wherein world leaders are expected to lay down a strategy of how nations will come together to prevent the certain, ecologica...

Eastern Pacific Garbage Patch Exploring the Plastic-Ocean Relationship

Anyone who is even remotely tuned into the world of environmental happenings would know about the problem of land-fillings and international dumping sites. However, not many would be ready to believe the unbelievable magnitude that one of these dumping destinations has achieved. Situated in the relatively unexplored waters extending between Hawaii and California, the Eastern Pacific Garbage Patch has gained an infamous reputation — it is now twice the size of Texas and has been attracting adventure seekers along with conservationists who just cannot understand how something so incredibly damaging to the environment was allowed to reach this size. Being dubbed as the ‘Everest’ of ocean dumps, it is a reality-check for everyone who thought that patrolling the international waterways from an ecological perspective was an effective solution.

 

Understanding the Patch

To be precise, the Eastern Patch is not a dumping site, but a point wherein the refuse released by nearby nations has been carried to and gradually deposited. This shouldn't be much of a surprise considering that 10% of nearly 260 million tons of wasted, industrialized plastic is carelessly abandoned in the oceans, every year. The Pacific Garbage Patch isn't a shocking revelation for green activists since dumping sites in isolated waterways are aplenty but the fact that it built-up relatively unnoticed and achieved such an overwhelming dimension must be troubling a lot of them.

 

What are the likely damages?

The Pacific Garbage Patch is a bit different from other such plastic-burdened dumping sites. Surprisingly, the surface layer manages to influence an opinion that the dumped content doesn't contain too much of plastic. However, researchers believe that more than 70% of its total volume consists of wasted plastics that have somehow managed to gather below a pile of floating, metal-heavy industrial junk. Given the enormity of the Patch, it is a certainty that much of it has already been weathered into smaller bits owing to the strong ocean currents. This obviously means that a large volume of plastic has managed to seep into the surrounding, marine flora & fauna — the estimated values are already challenging conventional calculations. Regarding the primary source contributing to the Patch’s development, it is practically impossible to paint a precise picture since the pollutants travel from numerous international sites.

 

The Immediate Reaction

Two expeditions are scheduled to survey the Patch, analyze the extent of damage that the marine life has suffered and engage global attention towards it. One of the expeditions will be taken aboard the New Horizon of the Scripps Institution of Oceanography. The Horizon begins its journey from San Diego on August 2. The other team will press ahead on the Kaisei, off the coast of San Francisco on August 4. Under Project Kaisei, a lot of effort would be put into quantifying this damage in the form of providing comparative figures.

 

The other side to the story

After reading about the Patch, you might be forced into thinking that plastics and the oceans just cannot co-exist. However, a development in the form of ‘Yu Chan’ might challenge your perception. It wouldn’t be an exaggeration to say that the wellbeing of an ocean is defined by the health of the creatures that inhabit it. So, how do plastics fit into this example? Yu Chan is the name of an Endangered Species sea turtle. Found in the fishing-heavy waters of Japan, the turtle was battling for its life when some rescuers took the it to Japan’s Sea Turtle Association. It appeared there was little hope for Chan, considering he had lost a sizeable portion of his forelimbs. However, things have improved drastically for this deep sea-diving mammal, as a team of researchers has provided him with polypropylene-made (a plastic derivative) prosthetics.

 

In all probability, Yu Chan may not be released into the oceans, since this technology hasn’t been tested before but his survival highlights a simple fact: the inherent properties of plastics don’t make it green or ecologically-destructive — we define its environmental impact. Being green is not only about calculating our carbon footprints, just putting that plastic bottle in the ‘Recycle’ labeled bag will do the needful and Plastiki exemplifies this approach.

 

Plastiki to the rescue?

It might be too late to actually redeem what once lay under the Patch, but a devoted green activist, De Rothschild, is trying his best to make people aware about the gravity of this situation. He plans to sail a boat made from harmless, recycled plastic across the garbage patch. The boat, called Plastiki, will be a part of this voyage to educate people about the fact that the great oceans are still being indiscriminately exploited.

 

 

 

 

How green is...?