Dutch Engineers Built a Giant Ocean Vacuum to Clean Plastic

A 600-meter floating 'ocean vacuum' is pulling tons of plastic out of the Pacific , and it’s already making waves

In an ambitious bid to fight ocean pollution, Dutch engineers have deployed a 600-meter-long floating device designed to scoop plastic waste from the sea. Built by nonprofit The Ocean Cleanup, this giant U-shaped system funnels drifting debris into a central collection zone, where it’s removed and sent for recycling.

The project, known as System 03, targets the Great Pacific Garbage Patch — one of the most polluted areas on Earth, where millions of tons of plastic threaten marine life and ecosystems. By using natural ocean currents, the device requires minimal energy to operate while covering vast stretches of water.

“We’ve already collected over 300,000 kilograms of plastic from the ocean,” said The Ocean Cleanup team in a recent update.

The reaction has been huge. Environmental experts have praised the technology as a scalable, sustainable step toward tackling global plastic waste, while critics stress the importance of stopping plastic at its source. To address that, The Ocean Cleanup is also rolling out river interceptors to block waste before it even reaches the sea.

Think about it: a machine the length of six football fields is sweeping our oceans clean. If expanded worldwide, it could dramatically reduce the plastic choking marine ecosystems and give future generations a chance to see cleaner oceans by 2040.

Sources: The Ocean Cleanup

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