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How can he make a profit out of cleaning the ocean ?
The government, companies and people must pay him to clean up.
Good for him to create a cleaning company.
This is the kind of thing that can change our world: young, brilliant people not pursuing the power of profit, but pursuing a better world.

Well I have an engineering degree and I think this idea is um ... not thought through. Fine?
It's not this easy - there is a reason that there hasn't been a solution for this yet.
Well I have an engineering degree and I think this idea is um ... not thought through. Fine?
It's not this easy - there is a reason that there hasn't been a solution for this yet.
Why not engage big trawling or seining rigs?
Pay for them with what we saved gutting food stamps. Or, not bombing Syria @ $500 thou per Tomahawk.
OK, for the nautical hazard folks: It would have to have a sonar locator and a satellite fed position update so as to not interfere with shipping. Ships are either operated by a computer which receives updates every few seconds from satellite (including navigational hazards) or operated by a person who then plots various obstacles via many methods. It would also have a reflective array to respond to radar and provide clear paint for the radar image. The sonar locator would be to alert submerged vessles as to its location since they can't paint it, cant receive chart updates every few seconds and certainly couldn't hear the damn thing as it is depicted. Also Submarines like to occupy the spaces inbetween where there are not shipping lanes because shipping density makes it harder to arrive at the surface when ya wanna come up.
I am sure they are thinking of those things since it would be required prior to being licensed by whichever county licensed it. Plus there are literally millions of existing navigational hazards that mariners must fix on their charts when approaching a new chunk of ocean. So that is a non-issue.
As to science degrees equating to engineering degree... nay nay moose breath. What i find telling is that "SEVERAL engineers were intrigued by his design". So while I cannot say with any authority, obviously those who saw the design felt it worthy and so did the patent office.
Finally, while this is apparently an exercise in pessimism versus optimism, in spite of the obstacles and nay sayers, i sincerely hope it works out well. If anyone has ever seen one of these gyres, in full 360 degree technicolor, it is the most revolting blight of humanity on the world.
The thing they need to do, right now, is establish identifiers required world wide for either the company or the specific vessel and then required for all materials used aboard. Such chemical stamping could then identify polluters and try them in world court. Countries refusing to participate should then face economic sanctions to include seizing all monetary assets to pay for clean up.
There is really no excuse for not accomplishing such a thing, except the country is in a perpetual deadlock since republicans cant get their way after losing the reigns of control. We cant lead when we are playing tug of war with ourselves.
What do the sea beds have to do wit it? The gyres are on the surface.
I'm wondering if some of the oil eating bacteria could be liberally applied in the areas - or don't they "do" plastics?
It's clear that we need to do something - we are killing a lot of wildlife thousands of miles from "civilization" in the process.
We have visited the idea of an ocean "Roomba" before. So far, nobody has been able to get it to work, for lots and lots of reasons. I think it makes good press to publish articles that say a 19 y.o. kid has brilliantly solved a problem that has eluded the world's greatest minds for half a century, that we can do it with almost no work, and actually make money in the process!
But, as Corny said, if it was that easy, it would already have been done. All the persistent and serious problems faced by the world are hard. They will require enormous effort, extraordinary international cooperation, and unbelievable amounts of money to solve. But that's not very fun to write about.
All the persistent and serious problems faced by the world are hard. They will require enormous effort, extraordinary international cooperation, and unbelievable amounts of money to solve. But that's not very fun to write about.
For most of the world's history, there were no bacteria that could break down wood. Therefore, wood piled upon wood as trees died, creating massive piles of debris which could not break down (and steadily removing CO2 from the atmosphere).
Where do think the debris goes?
Oil pollution floating on the sea surface is one factor, debris is very much another for the ocean beds are covered with human produced refuse. Floating booms can only remove surface debris, what of the refuse that lies on the sea bed?
This is a huge problem about which something needs to be done. I do not mean to disparage new ideas or creative thinking or young enthusiasm with my pessimism. But, this idea is hardly new. The concept of garbage-eating drones skimming the oceans has been suggested dozens of times over the past several decades. See, for example:
http://www.treehugger.com/clean-technology/watcleaner-robot-is-the-roomba-for-the-ocean.html
http://coastalenergyandenvironment.web.unc.edu/2012/07/25/drones-devour-drifting-debris/
http://www.tgdaily.com/sustainability-features/64705-garbage-eating-drone-destroys-ocean-pollution
We have visited the idea of an ocean "Roomba" before. So far, nobody has been able to get it to work, for lots and lots of reasons. I think it makes good press to publish articles that say a 19 y.o. kid has brilliantly solved a problem that has eluded the world's greatest minds for half a century, that we can do it with almost no work, and actually make money in the process!
