Much of the media have taken the claims of Boyan Slat at face value. The young Dutch engineer has claimed that his design for a series of floating ocean booms will clean the oceans of plastic. The BBC headline in 2014 which read, “The Dutch boy mopping up a sea of plastic” was pretty typical, reflecting the assumption that Slat’s design would work as intended. The media and Slat’s supporters really want to believe that the young engineer had found the solution for cleaning plastics from the oceans.
Impressively, Slat and his non-profit Ocean Cleanup succeeded in raising $20 million to fabricate and deploy a 600-meter-long prototype boom designed to trap and collect plastic refuse. It was towed 1,400 miles offshore to the so-called Great Pacific Garbage Patch for trials. Unfortunately, the prototype boom did not collect significant amounts of plastic as it was designed to do, and, worse, broke apart due to wave action. It will be towed back to California as weather permits.