Toronto marina installs experimental floating garbage cans to keep water clean - Action News
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Toronto

Toronto marina installs experimental floating garbage cans to keep water clean

Its usually easy to find coffee cups, cigarette butts or plastic bottles floating along Canadian shorelines,but at Torontos Outer Harbour Marina those sightings are rare, thanks to some newly installed floating garbage cans.

The Seabin is a new technology that can trap 4 kg of floating trash every day

Mike Dwyer, manager of Toronto's Outer Harbour Marina, shows CBC Toronto reporter Natalie Nanowski how to pull the debris containment bag out of the yellow Seabin. (Tina MacKenzie/CBC )

Coffee cups, cigarette butts,plastic bottles and othertrashy items areusually all-too easy to spot floating along mostshorelines,but at Toronto's Outer Harbour Marina those sightings are rare, thanks to some newly installed technology.

The innovation is called the Seabin, a cylindrical container mounted to the side of a dock. Itsucks in all the gross surface gunkeverything from larger itemsto oil and gas spills, andeven micro plastics.

The marina is one of the first places in Canada to get Seabins.It's running a pilot project and has three of them. They sitjust below the water's surface,apump at the bottommoves up and down, pullingdebris into a containment bag.

"Being a harbour, debris gathers in the water and we had to manually collect it,"Mike Dwyer, the manager of Outer Harbour Marina, told CBC Toronto.

"But since installing the bins, we've noticed a huge difference. They do all the work for us.All we have to do is empty the bag every day."

One of three Seabins attached to docks at the Outer Harbour Marina. The company that makes it says the Seabin can collect about four kilograms of trash a day on average. (Natalie Nanowski/CBC )

The National Geographic Society estimates that eightmillion tonnes of plastic waste escapes into the oceans every year from coastal nations.That's the "equivalent of five grocery bags of plastic trash for every foot of coastline around the globe." These figures don't take into account what ends up in lakes and rivers.

Seabin invented by 2 Australian surfers

Seabin is the brainchild of two Australian surfers who were fed up with seeing garbage every time they went into the ocean. Together they built a prototype, set up an Indiegogo page and crowdfunded about $350,000.

The pair has since partnered with W Products and Solutions to make a version of the Seabin that can be commercialized, says Gautier Peers, W Products and Solutions' sales manager for the Americas.

"On average, it collects about [3.8 kilograms] a day which means in a year's time a Seabin can collect 1.4 tonnes," said Peers.

Since coming on the market about a year ago, Seabins have captured about 115 tonnes of garbage. Even though that's a minute fraction of what is actually in the world's waterways, Peers finds the results promising.

"There's great satisfaction when you see how much trash has been collected," said Peers. "People are shocked to see just how much the bin can capture. It's motivating."

If the Outer Harbour Marina's pilot project goes well, it will install more bins.

Dwyer says many people are already stopping by to "take a look at how they work" and he wouldn't be surprised if they start popping up all over the city.