Successful first year of collaboration sees the removal of the equivalent of 65,000 33cl plastic bottles. MB92  Barcelona,  a  world-leading  superyacht  refit  shipyard  located  in  the  port  of Barcelona, announced that it has collected 570 kg of waste, the equivalent of 65,000 33cl  plastic bottles, over the past year thanks to two sea bins installed in its facilities. The  waste included everything from industrial plastics, bottles, cans, packaging, disposable  PPE such as masks, textiles to organic ocean waste.

The  MB92  Seabin  project,  which  began  in  2019,  forms  part  of  the  water  quality improvement objective of its sustainability plan and was created in order to manage the debris that is transported into the port from the Mediterranean by the tide. The first sea bin was installed in partnership with one of the shipyard’s most environmentally aware customers, the 80-metre superyacht MY Talitha, who helped MB92 with the acquisition and installation. Despite the large quantity of waste collected throughout 2020, the shipyard estimates  that, in a year without the global pandemic, the figure could have been as much as 780 kg.

The Seabin Project  was devised by Andrew Turton and Pete Ceglinski in 2015 and started  from a simple idea: if there are bins on land, why not install a bin in the water to filter  waste from the sea? Over time, the scope of the project evolved into a comprehensive  research, technology, and educational initiative with global interest and reach. The goal  of the creators, also shared by MB92, is ambitious: improve the water quality of all oceans  so that we might live in a world without the need for sea bins. The sea bins work by moving up and down with waves, collecting all waste that passes through. Water is sucked from the surface using a submersible water pump (capable of displacing up to 25,000 litres per hour) and passes through a collection bag inside the sea  bin itself. Each unit plugs directly into an electrical outlet that, once activated, enables  the water to be pumped out while retaining the debris within the sea bin bag.

The  shipyard’s  maintenance  team  is  responsible  for  monitoring  and  emptying  the contents once or twice a day depending on how full they are. The results of the extraction  are then sent to the Seabin Project team for analysis and research purposes.

A process in constant improvement

Each sea bin has the capacity to collect about 6kg of waste in its basket, which may not be enough on stormy days or rough seas. The Seabin Project is working to improve the results for those days when the tide brings greater amounts of waste, as well as to expand the level of participation in the project to collaborators and ports.

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