Ocean Plastic Once Choking Chile’s Shores Now in Patagonia’s Hats
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In Tumbes, a village in southern Chile, discarded plastic fishing nets are crammed into gaps between parked cars and market stalls, evidence of a global waste problem that the town is working to resolve.
Until recently, most discarded fishing nets in this coastal fishing village were dumped straight into the sea — contributing to the massive plastic pollution crisis that’s choking the planet’s oceans.
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“If you have a broken net, you throw it anywhere you can,” says Ramon Maldonado, a fisherman in Tumbes.
But a startup called Bureo — founded by three North American surfers — is collaborating with fishermen like Maldonado to keep hundreds of tons of discarded nets out of the ocean each year.
Nets are sorted, cleaned and cut in Bureo’s warehouse in Concepción, a city a few miles from Tumbes. Here they are turned into 100 percent recycled polyester and nylon pellets, called NetPlus, which are sold to companies as a sustainable alternative to first-use plastics.
Today NetPlus is used in Patagonia’s hat brims, Trek bike parts, Humanscale office chairs — and even sustainable Jenga sets.
Bureo joins dozens of initiatives addressing an urgent environmental question: How do we tackle our ocean plastic problem? And can we do it without reducing plastic use?
While it is challenging to gauge exactly how much plastic has accumulated in the world’s oceans, an estimated 8.8 million tons (8 million metric tons) of new plastic pollution enters oceans every year. The oil industry is investing in a huge surge of plastic production, which is expected to grow by 40 percent by 2030. Studies have also shown the proliferation of single-use plastic is accelerating climate change through greenhouse gas emissions at every stage of its lifecycle.
If current trends continue, by 2050 there could be more plastic in the ocean than fish by weight, according to the Ellen MacArthur Foundation.
Northern Point, Girlfriend Collective and Rothy’s are all budding companies producing clothing entirely from ocean plastics. Larger brands such as Nike, Adidas and Fjallraven have also launched garments from recycled ocean plastic.
The plastics industry has long pushed recycling as the solution to pollution. In reality, less than 10 percent of the plastic produced in the U.S. each year is recycled. This is in part because it is hard to make recycling initiatives profitable, as Bureo learned firsthand when they tried to produce sustainable skateboards in 2013.
“Ocean plastic is not one type of plastic that can be used for high-value products. It is mixed and degraded and needs to be separated,” says David Stover, who founded Bureo alongside Ben Kneppers and Kevin Ahearn.
Durable products need to be made from quality substances. Wading through masses of ocean trash and sourcing key material is time-consuming and financially draining.
The company met with scientists and coastal communities in Chile to vet different materials. They found that rather than smaller plastics such as bottles and six-pack rings, coastal communities were particularly burdened by fishing nets piling up on beaches.
Nets account for 10 percent of the ocean’s plastics, according to a United Nations report. Heavy and cumbersome, they choke land mammals and pollute seabeds and beaches. And fishermen in Chile were desperate to get rid of them.
“It was a burden and they had no solution for it,” says Kneppers.
Kneppers spent two years living in Chilean coastal villages, working directly with fishermen to flesh out how to collect and process the nets. Bureo compensates artisanal fishermen for their collaboration, while industrial vessels can earn environmental certifications by participating.
Curbing global plastic production, however, may prove the bigger challenge, especially given a likely surge in cheap new plastics resulting from falling oil prices.
“Replacing virgin plastics in the market with recycled materials is important to get to a circular economy,” says Luisa Santiago, who leads Latin American operations at the Ellen MacArthur Foundation. The ultimate goal, she stresses, must come from solutions that eradicate waste production, rather than rely on it. “We can’t recycle our way out of the problem.”
In the meantime, Bureo is making a dent in Chile’s net waste problem. The Concepción facility processes 881 tons (800 metric tons) of nets annually, clocking 2 million pounds (907,184 kilograms) of recycled raw plastic to date. They reached profitability in 2019.
The team has scaled production, launching sites in Peru and Argentina. They have also entered an agreement with Chile’s National Commercial Fishing Industry Association, and are on track to recycle 100 percent of the country’s wild-caught net waste.
All Patagonia’s hat brims now use Netplus, accounting for 66 tons (60 metric tons) of recycled material. Matt Dwyer, who leads Patagonia’s materials innovation and development team, says the hats are just the beginning.
“We have to provide whatever economic incentive we can for these materials to get recycled into high-quality durable goods, like a jacket you’re going to wear for 25 or 30 years,” he explains. “It’s about proving it can be done.”
This story originally appeared in The Guardian and is republished here as part of Covering Climate Now, a global journalism collaboration strengthening coverage of the climate story.
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Ocean Plastic Once Choking Chile’s Shores Now in Patagonia’s Hats
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