The Ocean Cleanup, Together With Partners, Celebrates the Official Deployment of Its Cleanup Technology in Thailand for the First Time
Back to pressBANGKOK, THAILAND, 26 March 2024: The Ocean Cleanup has deployed its first InterceptorTM river cleanup solution in the Chao Phraya River, Bangkok ā part of a wider research partnership to tackle plastic pollution in one of the worldās busiest working rivers.
Together with partners The Ministry of Natural Resources and Environment, the Department of Marine and Coastal Resources, Bangkok Metropolitan Administration, The Coca-Cola Company, the Embassy of the Netherlands in Bangkok, Ecomarine, Asimar, and Chulalongkorn University, the project will see Interceptor 019 extract trash while helping us learn more about plastic pollution in Bangkokās rivers and canals.
Interceptor 019 is part of The Ocean Cleanupās long-term partnership with The Coca-Cola Company, which began in 2021 and aims to support the deployment of innovative technologies to help prevent plastic from entering the worldās oceans from rivers.
The Chao Phraya is a vital waterway that serves as the lifeblood of the city. As one of Asia’s major rivers, it is a source of livelihood for many local communities and is indispensable to Bangkokās 11 million inhabitants.
Positioned near the Commemoration of H.M. the King’s 6th Cycle Birthday Park, Interceptor 019 is deployed within a key 16km stretch of the Chao Phraya where 61 canals flow into the river, often transporting plastic trash with them. Studies of the trash collected by Interceptor 019 will help us understand the composition of plastic floating in the river, with a focus on learning how to intercept trash before it reaches the last 50km of the Chao Phraya, where it enters the Gulf of Thailand and is emitted into the ocean.
Interceptor 019 is a solar powered, fully automated river cleanup solution, and is The Ocean Cleanupās 5th Interceptor across Southeast Asia, joining deployments in Indonesia, Vietnam, and two deployments in Malaysia. Other Interceptors have been deployed under this partnership in Dominican Republic and L.A.
Pol. Gen. Patcharawat Wongsuwan, Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Natural Resources and Environment, revealed; āThe Ministryās ultimate vision is to restore and preserve the environment by incorporating natural resources and environmental concerns into the Governmentās national agenda, as they form the foundation for social and economic development. The partnership to install the Interceptor 019 in the Chao Phraya River will undoubtedly bolster our proactive approach to managing natural resources, protecting the environment, and preserving biological diversity. It will be particularly crucial in addressing Thailandās complex challenges stemming from plastic waste.”
“We are delighted to support ĢĒŠÄÖ±²„and all partners in the collection and sorting of trash and plastic bottles retrieved from the Interceptor 019 on the Chao Phraya River. Our aim is to effectively manage all kinds of waste flowing into Bangkokās busiest river. By reintegrating these valuable plastics into the cycle and segregating other wastes, it thereby helps reduce the need for virgin plastic and mitigating the flow of waste into the ocean,” said Chadchart Sittipunt, Bangkok Governor.
Boyan Slat, Founder and CEO of The Ocean Cleanup, said; āInterceptor 019 marks a significant milestone in closing the tap on plastic pollution entering the oceans from Bangkok. This deployment is only the first step, alongside the Bangkok authorities and our other partners, in cleaning up the Chao Phraya. The lessons we learn here about eliminating ocean plastic emissions from major cities will be invaluable for other Interceptor projects around the world as we scale up our Rivers program.āā
Victor Wong, Vice President and General Manager of Coca-Cola Thailand, Myanmar, and Laos, expressed enthusiasm about the collaborative efforts with The Ocean Cleanup: “The partnership that weāve fostered with ĢĒŠÄÖ±²„over the past two years has reached a milestone moment in Thailand with the implementation of the innovative Interceptor technology in Bangkok’s renowned Chao Phraya River. The insights gained from our collaboration in Bangkok will help to inform the roll-out of this technology in countries around the world and weāre happy to be providing our support to this initiative as we test and learn.”
āTo promote ocean sustainability, the Netherlands believes collaboration, collective actions and innovative solutions that prevent and mitigate detrimental impacts are essential. Today I am pleased to support an important milestone for our aim to ending marine plastic pollution,ā said Remco van Wijngaarden, Ambassador of the Kingdom of the Netherlands to Thailand.
About the partners
- The Ministry of Natural Resources and Environment, the Department of Marine and Coastal Resources, and Chulalongkorn University will be involved in studying the types of plastic waste leaked into waterways to aid in planning solutions to mitigate plastic waste pollution in Thailandās major rivers.
- The Netherlands Embassy in Thailand has been involved in coordinating international efforts and introduced ĢĒŠÄÖ±²„to local partners, as its technology aligns with the ambitions of the Netherlands regarding innovation, sustainability and ocean policy.
- The Bangkok Metropolitan Administration is responsible for waste collection and separation of waste obtained from the Interceptor 019 to bring waste into the recycling process and non-recyclable waste to proper disposal.
- Ecomarine and Asian Marine Service are responsible for ensuring the highest efficiency in installation and operation of the Interceptor 019.
- Coca-Cola provides on the ground support including driving awareness of The Ocean Cleanups mission and advocating locally. As part of the global partnership interceptors have been deployed in Vietnam, Guatemala, Malaysia and the United States. As part of its World Without Waste vision, The Coca-Cola Company is working to ensure that all of the material it uses in its packaging is collected and recycled, so that none of it ends up as waste. The Company has a global goal to help collect and recycle every bottle and can they sell by 2030.
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DOWNLOADS
Photos, illustrations, and videos for ĢĒŠÄÖ±²„can be found in theĀ Interceptor 019 media gallery.
ABOUT THE OCEAN CLEANUP
ĢĒŠÄÖ±²„is an international non-profit organization that develops and scales technologies to rid the worldās oceans of plastic. To do this, ĢĒŠÄÖ±²„uses a dual strategy: intercepting in rivers to stop the inflow, and cleaning up what has already accumulated in the ocean. For the latter, the organization develops and deploys large-scale systems to efficiently concentrate the plastic for periodic removal. This plastic is tracked and traced through DNVās chain of custody model to certify claims of origin when recycling it into new products. To curb the tide via rivers, ĢĒŠÄÖ±²„has developed Interceptor⢠solutions to halt and extract riverine plastic before it reaches the ocean. Founded in 2013 by Boyan Slat, ĢĒŠÄÖ±²„now employs a multi-disciplined team of approximately 140. The foundation is headquartered in Rotterdam, the Netherlands, and opened its first regional office in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, in 2023.
PRESS CONTACTS
The Ocean Cleanup
CFF Communications, Amsterdam
Niels Broekhof
press@theoceancleanup.com
+31 (0)6 30 37 49 30
Coca-Cola (Thailand) Ltd.
Chanokpat Yoswatananont ā Communications Manager
+66 61-403-6656
Hill & Knowlton Thailand
Walaisamorn Bheungnoi (Tukta)
wbheungnoi@hillandknowlton.com
+66 81-615-0542
Jantarat Singtongam (Dow)
JSingtongam@hillandknowlton.com
+66 62-694-2966
Kanwara Sungthong (Nett)
ksungthong@hillandknowlton.com
+66 83-839-0709
