If you鈥檝e ever tried to navigate , you鈥檝e probably realized that there鈥檚 a lot of plastic that can鈥檛 be recycled. And most plastic can only be recycled once.
Meanwhile, Hawaii鈥檚 landfills are nearing capacity, and plastic is polluting the oceans and washing up on Hawaii鈥檚 beaches.
But residents are looking for creative ways to address the growing plastic problem. The latest episode of 鈥淎re We Doomed? And Other Burning Environmental Questions鈥 profiles three ideas sent in from listeners.
Plastic To Petroleum
On a Saturday in late February, a group of elementary students and adult volunteers gathered outside Kamiloiki Elementary School in Hawaii Kai to sort through giant garbage bags full of plastic bottle caps.
The kids were part of the school鈥檚 Save The Environment Club, one of dozens of groups who worked with the nonprofit to collect plastic lids, plastic bottle caps and other flimsy types of plastic from across the state.
Their hope is that the flimsy plastic can be melted down into fuel for ships and planes.
鈥淭here’s probably always going to be a need for fuel, so why not get it from all the plastic waste that exists today,鈥 said Suzanne Frazer, who heads the nonprofit.
But the plastic has to be completely clean and free of any stickers before it can be melted down.
That鈥檚 where 10-year-old Hannah Ferguson comes in.
鈥淚 saw a video about the environment and how it鈥檚 getting damaged and I wanted to save it,鈥 she said while donning gloves and starting to sort through the giant pile of caps on the sidewalk in front of her classroom.
After months of work, the groups collected and cleaned enough plastic caps to fill a 40-foot shipping container with about 7,000 pounds of plastic.
It arrived at New Hope Energy in Texas mid-March. is one of six companies experimenting with plastic-to-fuel in the country and at peak capacity, their factory can produce 聽 The technology to 鈥渃鈥 plastics into fuel has been around for years, but in past decades many endeavors have been thwarted by sudden drops in the price of oil.
The price of oil is once again low, which will make it hard for plastic-to-fuel companies to compete, but Frazer is hoping that local governments will start investing in plastic-to-fuel as a way to empty their landfills.
鈥淚 think that this is one of the technologies of the future, because there’s a lot of potential,鈥 she said.
Right now the shipping container with Hawaii鈥檚 plastic is just waiting at a train station in Texas, but once it鈥檚 safe to travel and work again the caps will be shredded, melted down and the experiment can continue.
鈥淲e鈥檙e so close to this being a reality after years of hard work,鈥 said Frazer. 鈥淛ust need this pandemic to pass and then we can start production.鈥
Building Blocks
Turning post-consumer plastic into construction material is an idea that was specifically mentioned by nine different 鈥淎re We Doomed鈥 listeners.
Ed Grieser runs a company in Pennsylvania that makes building blocks from all sorts of plastic 鈥 no prior cleaning required.
鈥淭his is the bottom of the barrel stuff,鈥 he said. 鈥淭his is the type of plastic that if we weren’t working with it, it would absolutely be going into a landfill.鈥
He melts down plastic film, dirty bottles, even plastic with stickers on it, and extrudes the plastic 鈥渘oodles鈥 into porous building blocks, which he calls . They鈥檙e used across the country as a substitute for gravel underneath athletic fields, as foundations for gardens and to stabilize hillsides.
鈥淚t looks like a burnt Rice Krispie,鈥 he said. 鈥淎nd it is stronger than the normal concrete.鈥
Grieser thought this model was a waste of financial resources, so he started bringing his HydroBlox machines to different communities on the backs of flatbed trucks.
鈥淲e tell the community, 鈥楬ang on to your plastic鈥 and … we just come in with our equipment and process the plastic right there on site,鈥 he said. 鈥淲e call it FLOW — it鈥檚 the factory line on wheels.鈥
Whether this makes sense in Hawaii remains to be seen. Grieser will face the same challenge companies looking to set-up-shop on islands face: geography, price of land and high operational costs.
Grieser is currently working with a few local governments in the Caribbean to bring a mobile HydroBlox factory to their island communities, which Grieser hopes could be a model for Hawaii.
And although he does care about the environment, at the end of the day Greiser says he has a business to run, and he wouldn鈥檛 be expanding to the Caribbean and the Hawaiian Islands if it didn鈥檛 make economic sense.
鈥淎s much as we’d love to tear at your heartstrings, tell you that ‘this is the right thing to do …’ it has to make sense in the market,鈥 he said.
Microplastic Magnets
Most recycling facilities won鈥檛 take marine debris because they can鈥檛 verify the type of plastic.
While Stephanie Elm was horrified at how much trash washed up on her nearby beach, she was also inspired by all the different colors.
鈥淕reen army men toys, bright red toothbrushes, blue nets and purple — that鈥檚 the one that鈥檚 really rare so it鈥檚 exciting when I find that,鈥 she said.
Using alphabet molds filled with these bright shards of plastic, she creates magnets shaped like little letters. She runs her business, , out of her spare bedroom where every surface is covered in tiny molds of the letter 鈥淎.鈥
鈥淭here’s so many A鈥檚 and vowels in the Hawaiian alphabet that I would always be turning over A’s so quick and running out,鈥 she said.
She says she regularly sells out at farmer鈥檚 markets and craft fairs across Oahu. Creating magnets, jewelry and keychains from microplastics won鈥檛 be enough to clean Hawaii鈥檚 beaches but Elm hopes the little magnets remind people to stop using so much plastic in the first place.
鈥淢ake an effort to buy more sustainable products, find alternatives for products that they use every day and make better choices when it comes to buying so that we’re not having to continually keep picking these up and clean the beaches and hurting our environments,鈥 she said.
鈥淎re We Doomed? And Other Burning Environmental Questions鈥 is funded in part by grants from the Environmental Funders Group of the Hawaii Community Foundation and the Frost Family Foundation.
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