The pilot unit - a year back, now, was to be tested:
  Sep 20, 2010
  [SNIP] The collaboration between Kaisei, an ocean cleanup initiative, and Covanta, a renewable energy company, was brokered by the  Clinton Global Initiative. Both organizations are members of CGI's Rethinking Waste subgroup, which works on creative solutions to waste management. The  partnership was a natural fit, according to Paul Gilman, Chief  Sustainability Officer of Covanta. "We're in the process of piloting technology that converts municipal solid waste, including nonrecyclable plastics, into a diesel substitute. That part of what we  do makes a complementary bookend to our focus on plastics in the ocean," he says.  "As a company we've done a considerable amount of work on marine debris."
  Covanta and Kaisei's partnership is in the  developing stages, mainly because of technological and financial  roadblocks. Kaisei is planning an exploratory mission to the Plastic  Vortex for marine debris research, but the organization still needs more  funding. And Covanta's plastic-to-diesel technology isn't ready for  commercialization quite yet--the company is testing it at a pilot  facility in Massachusetts through the end of the year. 
  While  a joint Kaisei and Covanta ocean expedition may still be a few years  away, Covanta's technology could be used elsewhere in the meantime. "The  beauty with this technology is that once it's shown to work, it can be  used around the world in any kind of waste management capacity. There  are whole coastal communities that are contributing to this [plastic]  problem," says Douglas Woodring, Co-Founder of Project Kaisei.
  Eventually,  though, the seemingly endless Plastic Vortex could provide us with fuel  for our daily lives. "If things work well, Kaisei will be able to  supply us with enough plastic residues to do a demonstration of a conversion to our diesel substitute," Gilman says.
  fastcompany.com |