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(Video courtesy Hawaii DLNR)
A large, motorized vacuum cleaner designed to remove small plastics from beaches has been tested in Hawaii with the eventual aim of mass-producing a machine to tackle the growing worldwide problem of marine microplastics. The device is called a Ho'ola One.
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DLNR
Ho‘ola One, a vacuum-like contraption, was shipped from eastern Canada to
Hawaii island to test its ability to suck up microplastics that litter Kamilo Point.
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A large, motorized vacuum cleaner designed to remove small plastics from beaches has been tested in Hawaii with the eventual aim of mass-producing a machine to tackle the growing worldwide problem of marine
microplastics.
The prototype called Ho‘ola One — designed
by a 12-member team of
mechanical engineering
students and shipped to the islands from eastern Canada — was deployed last week to clean the sand at Kamilo Point on Hawaii island.
The team from the University of Sherbrooke in Quebec is now analyzing the results of its tests but indicated Wednesday that with
continual adjustment
and alteration the machine — dubbed Ho‘ola One —
improved its operating
performance each day.
A news conference Wednesday in Honolulu
featuring the student innovators was hosted by the
state Department of Land and Natural Resources.
Nine of the 12 students traveled with Ho‘ola One to Hawaii after raising more than $50,000 to design and build the machine.
The Hawai‘i Wildlife
Fund, whose volunteers have worked hard to reduce plastic pollution on remote Kamilo Point, raised $15,000 to bring the contraption
and most of its designers
to Hawaii.
“We’ve always kind
of joked about having a marine plastic magnet and this is the closest and most innovative project that I’ve seen,” said Megan Lamson Leatherman, a marine biologist
who splits her time between Hawai‘i Wildlife Fund and
DLNR’s Division of Aquatic Resources. “So I’ve got a lot of hope for this, and I’m really stoked.”
Kamilo Point, nicknamed “Trash Beach” or “Plastic Beach,” is notorious for
its piles of microplastics, courtesy of the currents
that tap into the Great Pacific Garbage Patch.
Plastic is the most
prevalent type of marine
debris found in our oceans, according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, and it is
a threat to aquatic life
and birds that mistake it
for food.