Giant SA ‘vacuum cleaner’ leaves beaches plastic-free
TAKE A LOOK | This giant South African ‘vacuum cleaner’ leaves beaches microplastic-free
- A giant beach-friendly vacuum cleaner can be seen trundling along Cape Town’s Lagoon Beach.
- Called the Enviro Buggy, it is helping to sieve out microplastics and pick up normal, larger pieces of rubbish from the sand.
- Litter is a big problem for South Africa’s wildlife because they can get entangled in it or end up eating it, as they can’t distinguish between it and real food.
A giant blue four-wheeled beach ‘vacuum cleaner’ is being used to keep a Cape Town beach plastic-free.
Called the Enviro Buggy, it is helping to sieve out microplastics and pick up normal, larger pieces of rubbish from the Mother City’s Lagoon Beach.
It can be seen trundling along the soft white sand, followed by a hoard of 50 mask-wearing beach cleaners carrying bags and picking up litter in its wake.
The Enviro Buggy is the brainchild of conservationist group #SeaTheBiggerPicture Ocean Initiative (#STBP) and engineers from Matriarch Generic Engineering.
“The Enviro Buggy was born out of a necessity. We were fed up with trying to pick up so many tiny degraded particles of plastic. It was near impossible by hand, even with a large-scale crew,” said Tash Krauss, a conservationist at STBP.
So they built the Enviro Buggy to suck up pesky microplastics, pieces of plastic that have broken down and now are smaller than 5mm, sieving them out from ordinary beach sand. It would take humans days to do the same using manual methods.
“Plastic doesn’t biodegrade, it just gets smaller and smaller. The idea behind the buggy is that with a strong vacuum suction you can suck up large amounts of sand particles that include these small parts of plastic particles. Then sand filters out ideally leaving just the plastic behind. Which we hope will make it a much more efficient cleaning method”, said Krauss.
Animals also end up eating the plastic as they can’t distinguish between the litter and real food. This could possibly contaminate humans when they consume the wildlife that eat it. Researchers warn the effect of microplastic ingestion on human health is still largely unknown.
South African researchers have found almost 90% of South Africa’s marine plastic pollution originates from its own river systems. This amounts to between 15,000 and 40,000 tonnes of marine plastic per year which ends up on South Africa’s beaches.
The team of conservationists hopes the Enviro Buggy will go a long way toward helping beach cleaners suck up the problematic waste that washes up on South African shorelines while creating awareness with this curious contraption.
Once the engine is roaring and the Enviro Buggy moves, it’s almost cathartic to sit back and watch it suck up stray cigarette butts, straws, and bits of polystyrene. It’s almost as if you were at home vacuuming your own carpet and not the hard to walk on the soft white sand of Cape Town.
It’s still however got a few environmental obstacles it needs to overcome to be well and truly beach ready.
While it’s capable of driving on wet sand, a team of 3 needs to give it a helping hand on softer parts of the beach– as the wheels get stuck. It also requires a ramp to access the sand, which might not be ideal to access certain beaches in South Africa.
“We loved the idea and got straight into designing it. Our small engineering company is based in Johannesburg and a long way from the beaches to test. But with their help on what they wanted out of this, we eventually designed the buggy,” said Luigi Faccio, engineer Matriarch Generic Engineering, and the man who designed it.
While it’s early days for the Enviro Buggy, it shows that human ingenuity can go a long way toward making beaches cleaner – one giant sucking vacuuming cleaner at a time. The team is eager to make progress and is looking for funding.