Zürcher Nachrichten - A French sailor's personal 'Plastic Odyssey'

EUR -
AED 4.349807
AFN 74.029495
ALL 96.439175
AMD 445.329332
ANG 2.119806
AOA 1086.119834
ARS 1650.492107
AUD 1.675855
AWG 2.133449
AZN 2.015457
BAM 1.955523
BBD 2.382622
BDT 144.549503
BGN 1.951516
BHD 0.446527
BIF 3507.509923
BMD 1.184427
BND 1.494676
BOB 8.191908
BRL 6.184368
BSD 1.182967
BTN 107.234983
BWP 15.610314
BYN 3.371422
BYR 23214.770099
BZD 2.379083
CAD 1.617004
CDF 2670.882599
CHF 0.913071
CLF 0.025999
CLP 1026.60194
CNY 8.18291
CNH 8.15494
COP 4336.353235
CRC 568.840949
CUC 1.184427
CUP 31.387317
CVE 110.247505
CZK 24.27347
DJF 210.656353
DKK 7.470869
DOP 73.002422
DZD 153.682964
EGP 55.634792
ERN 17.766406
ETB 184.009898
FJD 2.60035
FKP 0.869041
GBP 0.873604
GEL 3.162202
GGP 0.869041
GHS 13.006265
GIP 0.869041
GMD 87.059613
GNF 10384.009718
GTQ 9.07256
GYD 247.486995
HKD 9.256635
HNL 31.313749
HRK 7.534257
HTG 155.067176
HUF 377.983242
IDR 20016.817075
ILS 3.664748
IMP 0.869041
INR 107.422441
IQD 1549.586807
IRR 49893.989493
ISK 144.99777
JEP 0.869041
JMD 184.610056
JOD 0.839712
JPY 181.776976
KES 152.732039
KGS 103.578059
KHR 4754.606786
KMF 493.906312
KPW 1065.919883
KRW 1709.89827
KWD 0.362791
KYD 0.985864
KZT 580.610119
LAK 25342.513363
LBP 105930.478844
LKR 365.999646
LRD 220.014158
LSL 18.983588
LTL 3.497305
LVL 0.716448
LYD 7.457163
MAD 10.794161
MDL 20.13323
MGA 5178.462429
MKD 61.624961
MMK 2487.32818
MNT 4227.647776
MOP 9.52439
MRU 47.224098
MUR 54.483081
MVR 18.246038
MWK 2051.287058
MXN 20.292847
MYR 4.580399
MZN 75.679679
NAD 18.983588
NGN 1593.587137
NIO 43.535481
NOK 11.304734
NPR 171.585188
NZD 1.974647
OMR 0.455406
PAB 1.182942
PEN 3.959838
PGK 5.081472
PHP 68.48591
PKR 330.814662
PLN 4.219936
PYG 7732.132054
QAR 4.311416
RON 5.095429
RSD 117.356589
RUB 90.431065
RWF 1727.720647
SAR 4.441926
SBD 9.536604
SCR 16.690072
SDG 712.430156
SEK 10.63568
SGD 1.496553
SHP 0.888627
SLE 28.959321
SLL 24836.842169
SOS 674.927087
SRD 44.654107
STD 24515.2485
STN 24.497457
SVC 10.350576
SYP 13099.259621
SZL 18.97795
THB 37.024787
TJS 11.190035
TMT 4.157339
TND 3.416758
TOP 2.851816
TRY 51.807846
TTD 8.021896
TWD 37.188639
TZS 3074.657744
UAH 51.189886
UGX 4181.442367
USD 1.184427
UYU 45.96193
UZS 14421.015948
VES 468.881432
VND 30759.570381
VUV 141.051733
WST 3.203755
XAF 655.888913
XAG 0.01568
XAU 0.00024
XCD 3.200974
XCG 2.131907
XDR 0.815715
XOF 655.883376
XPF 119.331742
YER 282.337801
ZAR 18.962499
ZMK 10661.25965
ZMW 21.878452
ZWL 381.385026
  • RBGPF

    0.1000

    82.5

    +0.12%

  • JRI

    -0.0200

    13.22

    -0.15%

  • BCC

    -0.4300

    86.07

    -0.5%

  • BCE

    0.0800

    25.79

    +0.31%

  • CMSD

    0.0800

    23.72

    +0.34%

  • RELX

    -0.6100

    30.45

    -2%

  • RYCEF

    0.4500

    17.55

    +2.56%

  • GSK

    1.9400

    60.87

    +3.19%

  • RIO

    -1.1900

    96.88

    -1.23%

  • NGG

    0.0200

    92.42

    +0.02%

  • CMSC

    0.1100

    23.86

    +0.46%

  • AZN

    3.9300

    209.48

    +1.88%

  • VOD

    0.0900

    15.66

    +0.57%

  • BP

    -0.1000

    37.56

    -0.27%

  • BTI

    -0.5900

    58.91

    -1%

A French sailor's personal 'Plastic Odyssey'
A French sailor's personal 'Plastic Odyssey' / Photo: JOEL SAGET - AFP

A French sailor's personal 'Plastic Odyssey'

Simon Bernard's private war on plastic pollution began in 2016.

Text size:

From the deck of the cargo ship he was working on, Bernard was stunned to discover mountains of rubbish piled up in Hann Bay, once a white sandy beach that had become an open sewer in the Senegalese capital Dakar.

Thickets of rubbish were almost everywhere along the coast, "washing into the sea with the tides and waves," the 34-year-old sailor told AFP in an interview.

It was, he said, a terrible shock. "At sea, you don't see the plastic."

Deeply moved by seeing fishermen pulling tangled webs of plastic from their nets, Bernard -– newly graduated from France's Merchant Navy -– enlisted another engineer, Alexandre Dechelotte, to embark on what he dubbed "Plastic Odyssey".

The plan was to complete a round-the-world expedition aboard a 40-metre (130-foot) laboratory ship to raise awareness at their many ports of call -- especially among children -– about the devastating impact of the 20 tonnes of plastic waste dumped into the oceans every minute of every day.

The three-year expedition, which partnered with local associations along their route, is almost complete.

- 'Avoid using it' -

Bernard secured financial sponsors, starting with a major French cosmetics brand that promoted the partnership as part of its commitment to increase the proportion of recycled plastic in its products.

But he said he was under no illusions: he knows that his initiative has had a modest impact on the global fight against plastic pollution.

He is also aware of earlier projects with similar goals that fell short of their ambitions.

The Ocean Cleanup launch by 18-year-old Dutch inventor Boyan Slat in 2013 – targeting the notorious Great Pacific Garbage Patch between Hawaii and California -- attracted money and attention but was hampered by design flaws and logistical limitations. A recent reboot of the system has shown greater potential for plastic removal at scale.

Another initiative launched from France in 2018, the SeaCleaners, also reported disappointing yields of plastic pollution, and folded operations last year under the shadow of financial mismanagement.

But Bernard said the cause was too important to ignore, and aimed to prove that even small-scale efforts were critical in striving for a future with less plastic. Plastic Odyssey today has a staff of 35.

"The real solution to plastic pollution is to avoid using it," he said.

Nearly 200 nations are huddled in Geneva this week and next to forge a treaty to tackle the plastics crisis, and one of the most divisive issues on the table is whether to aim for reducing plastics production at the source, rather than simply cleaning up pollution after the fact.

- 30 stopovers -

Giving up his dream of piloting ferries off the Normandy coast, Bernard left France on October 1, 2022. He is currently in Mayotte, a French territory in the Indian Ocean, and is nearing the end of his 30 three-week stops in three continents.

His odyssey has taken him across the Mediterranean Sea as well as the Atlantic, Indian and Pacific oceans.

During stops in Marseille, Beirut, Dakar, Recife, Madras (Chennai) and two dozen other ports, he met with local associations, start-ups and companies working to collect, sort or recycle plastic.

He marvels, he said, at the "inventiveness" of the people he met, especially those who have lost everything.

He recalled an entrepreneur in Lebanon who collected recyclable household waste door-to-door from 60,000 people in a country that no longer has a public service for disposing of plastic.

Two and a half years into his adventure Bernard gave up his apartment, and he now lives on the boat.

The Plastic Odyssey has catalogued more than hundred local solutions for doing without plastic, which is derived from petroleum.

Bernard has adopted several of them, including one "that works very well on board the boat" to make water drinkable, eliminating the need for plastic bottles.

"This has saved us 25,000 bottles of water in two years -- almost a tonne of plastic," he calculated.

G.Kuhn--NZN