Ocean Cleanup Accused of Staging Removal After Plastic Looked Too Clean
Environmental organization The Ocean Cleanup has denied accusations that it staged a massive plastic removal operation after social media users claimed the debris looked too clean.

The Ocean Cleanup shared footage of a net pulling up 3,810kg (8,400lb) of plastic it had removed from a patch of ocean known as the Great Pacific Garbage Patch on Twitter. The video can be viewed here.
Here’s the footage of another 3810kg catch from the Great Pacific Garbage Patch on February 5th. Next extraction is scheduled today. βοΈ pic.twitter.com/DSx0kxPWEF
β The Ocean Cleanup (@TheOceanCleanup) February 14, 2022
The tweet, showing plastic removed from the ocean, received backlash
The Great Pacific Garbage patch is an area between Hawaii and Californaia where a large amount of litter, fishing gear, and other marine debris has collected. Large amounts of debris accumulates here because it is surrounded by the North Pacific Subtropical Gyre, which is a system of swirling ocean currents.
Plastic is brought to the garbage patch by the currents, however settles when it gets to the center of the gyre, which is a calm and stable part of water. It then becomes trapped in the middle.
A 2018 study estimated there was roughly 79,000 tons of plastic in the patch.
The Ocean Cleanup was founded in 2013 by Dutch inventor Boyan Slat. It has the goal of removing 90 percent of plastic from the Great Pacific Garbage Patch by 2040, with plans to scale-up its current operations over the coming years.
It uses trawlers to catch the plastic, attached to the back of its ships. The organization has established a system using large trawlers to maximise the amount of plastic caught. Bycatch, the accidental capture of sea life such as fish, is often an inevitable part of fishing and plastic clean up operations, as the modern nets and fishing gear are efficient at catching everything in their path.
The Ocean Cleanup claims it have developed nets and technology that avoid the amount of bycatch it their nets and fish can easily swim in and out.
However, the latest footage has raised suspicions among experts, with many claiming it is staged.
Experts wondered why the hauled up plastic looked so clean, despite some having been in the ocean for decades. Others raised concerns that there appears to be no bio-fuelling on the plastic, which refers to the growth of organisms such as barnacles and algae.
This is what years-old trash looks like in the middle of the Pacific. Or, at least *some* of it should look like this. The Ocean Cleanup has some explaining to do. https://t.co/EM0eqUb8yP
β Clark Richards, PhD (@ClarkGRichards) February 15, 2022
For those of you raising an eyebrow at the suspiciously clean plastic being pulled from the ocean by the Cleanup people, compare π https://t.co/HYX7U9M7CZ
β Katie Matthews (@katie_at_sea) February 15, 2022
Trevor Branch, associate professor at the School of Aquatic and Fishery Sciences at the University of Washington, initially raised his suspicions in a tweet, claiming it was “odd.”
He told Newsweek: “The plastic they picked up, most of which they say is 10 to 30 years old, is so clean and free of the organisms that usually grow very quickly on anything in the ocean … although I am not an expert in biofouling, others had similar questions.”
Similarly, David Shiffman, marine conservation biologist at Arizona State University, told Newsweek he thought the footage “raised eyebrows.”
“The imagery they showed is just not at all what it would look like if one were to truly drag a big net through the ocean and scoop up plastic that had been floating there for years,” he said. “It’s too brightly colored, nothing is growing on it, and they didn’t catch anything but plastic.”… More
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