Boyan slat biography channel
Boyan Slat
Dutch inventor and entrepreneur
Boyan Slat (born 27 July )[2][3] is a Dutch inventor and entrepreneur.[4] A former aerospace engineering student,[5][6] he is the CEO of The Ocean Cleanup.[7]
Initial interest in plastic pollution
In , Slat went diving and found that the amount of plastic surpassed the number of fish in the area he explored.
He made ocean plastic pollution the subject of a high school undertaking examining why it was considered impossible to clean up. He later came up with the idea of building a passive plastic catchment system, using circulating ocean currents to net plastic waste, which he presented at a TEDx talk in Delft in [8][9]
Slat discontinued his aerospace engineering studies at TU Delft to devote his time to developing his idea.
Thanks to them, we can spot errors and clunky parts in the website, show more relevant advertisements, learn which content is most popular, play videos from YouTube, and more. Subscribe to our mailing list to get the latest news on the cleanup progress. We share updates on plastic catches, research findings, modern projects, what we do with the plastic, ways to obtain involved and much more! View our privacy policy to study more about how we store your details.He founded The Ocean Cleanup in , and shortly after, his TEDx communicate went viral after being distributed on several news sites.[8] In , Slat wrote in The Economist: "Technology is the most potent agent of change.
It is an amplifier of our human capabilities Whereas other change-agents rely on reshuffling the existing building blocks of society, technological innovation creates entirely new ones, expanding our problem-solving toolbox."[10]
The Ocean Cleanup
Main article: The Ocean Cleanup
In Slat founded the non-profit The Ocean Cleanup, of which he serves as the CEO.[7] The group's mission is to progress advanced technologies to rid the world's oceans of plastic.[11] It raised US$million through a crowd funding campaign with the aid of 38, donors from countries.[12] In June , the Ocean Cleanup published a page feasibility study[13] about the project's potential.
Some declared the concept unfeasible in a technical critique[14][15][16] of the feasibility study on the Deep Sea News website, which was cited by other publications, including Popular Science[17] and The Guardian.[18]
Since the Ocean Cleanup started, the organization has raised tens of millions of dollars in donations from entrepreneurs in Europe and in Silicon Valley, including Marc Benioff, CEO of Salesforce.[19][20]
Cleanup systems
The first and second systems, dubbed Systems and /B respectively, encountered various technical failures.
System was unable to effectively retain plastic and suffered structural press damage that caused an meter section to break off at one point. However, in , System /B, which was a redesign of System , successfully captured plastic.
This first mission (which includes both systems) returned 60 bags of garbage.[21]
In July , System , an updated version, gathered 9, kilograms (20,lb) of trash.[22]
The Interceptor
At an unveiling of a new cleanup system dubbed The Interceptor,[23] Slat cited research from the company which showed that 1, of the world's most polluted rivers were responsible for roughly 80% of the world's plastic pollution.
In an effort to "close the tap" and drastically reduce the amount of plastic entering the world's oceans, The Ocean Cleanup had devised a barge-like system that was completely solar powered and was aimed to be a scalable solution that could be deployed around the world's rivers.
Boyan Slat born 27 July [ 2 ] [ 3 ] is a Dutch inventor and entrepreneur. InSlat went diving and found that the amount of plastic surpassed the number of fish in the area he explored. He made ocean plastic pollution the subject of a high school plan examining why it was considered impossible to clean up. He later came up with the idea of building a passive plastic catchment system, using circulating ocean currents to net plastic wastewhich he presented at a TEDx talk in Delft inAs of mid , their interceptors have been deployed in Indonesia, Malaysia, the Dominican Republic, and Vietnam, and are prepared to be deployed in Thailand and Los Angeles, California.[24]
Awards and recognition
Personal life
Born in the Netherlands, Slat is of Croatian descent through his father.[33]
References
- ^"Boyan Slat website".
8 December Retrieved 5 November
- ^Finger, Tobias (24 June ). "The Ocean – Dieser Scholar will die Weltmeere Plastikmüll befreie" [The Ocean: This student wants to rid the seas of plastic waste]. Umwelt [environment] (in German).
WiWo Green. Archived from the original on 3 Protest Retrieved 25 October
- ^Winter, Caroline (16 September ). "This Dutch Guy Now Has the Funds to Build His Ocean Cleanup Machine". Bloomberg Businessweek.
Archived from the original on 17 September
- ^Boyan, Slat (20 October ). "Researchgate". Researchgate.
- ^Pabst, Josephine (24 October ).How it all Began | Milestones | The Ocean Cleanup: Boyan Slat (born 27 July ) [2] [3] is a Dutch inventor and entrepreneur. [4] A former aerospace engineering student, [5] [6] he is the CEO of The Ocean Cleanup. [7].
"Idee eines Jährigen könnte die Ozeane entmüllen". Die Welt (in German).
- ^"Boyan Slat". 8 December Retrieved 24 July
- ^ ab"About". The Ocean. Retrieved 24 July
- ^ ab"How it all began".
The Ocean Cleanup. Retrieved 6 June
- ^"How the oceans can clean themselves: Boyan Slat at TEDxDelft". YouTube.
Boyan Slat (27 July ) is a Dutch inventor and entrepreneur, warm about creating megaprojects to deal with planetary problems. He is the founder and CEO of The Ocean Cleanup; a non-profit company developing and scaling technologies to rid the world’s oceans of plastic.
24 October Retrieved 6 June
- ^Slat, Boyan. "The Economist". The Economist.
- ^"About". The Ocean Cleanup. Retrieved 6 June
- ^"Crowd Funding Campaign".
The Ocean Cleanup. Retrieved 6 June
- ^Slat, Boyan (June ), How the oceans can clean themselves: a feasibility study(PDF), archived from the original(PDF) on 23 April , retrieved 24 February This is version of the study.
It states (p. 9) that version is available on request.
- ^McClain, Craig (6 January ). "The Continued Boondoggle of the Ocean Cleanup". DeepSeaNews. Retrieved 12 August
- ^Martini, Kim; Goldstein, Miriam (14 July ), The Ocean Cleanup, Part 2: Technical review of the feasibility study
- ^Ben, Guarino (17 January ).
"Experts warned this floating garbage collector wouldn't work. The ocean proved them right". The Washington Post.
- ^Gertz, Emily (16 July ), Does 'The Ocean Cleanup' Upright Up To Peer Review?, Well-liked Science
- ^Kratochwill, Lindsey (26 March ), "Too good to be true?
The Ocean Cleanup Project faces feasibility questions", The Guardian
- ^ abCaminiti, Susan (22 April ). "Why Peter Thiel believes in this year-old's dream to clean up the oceans".
CNBC. Retrieved 23 April
- ^"The Ocean Cleanup Raises Million USD in Donations to Start Pacific Cleanup Trials".Boyan Slat is a Dutch inventor and entrepreneur who creates megaprojects as technological solutions to global problems. Age 18, Slat devised a concept which utilizes the natural oceanic forces to passively catch and concentrate ocean plastic, through which the theoretical cleanup time could be reduced from millennia to mere years. All American Speakers Bureau is a full-service talent booking agency providing information on booking Boyan Slat for speaking engagements, personal appearances and corporate events. Contact an All American Speakers Bureau booking agent for more information on Boyan Slat speaking fees, availability, speech topics and cost to hire for your next exist or virtual event.
The Ocean Cleanup. Archived from the first on 2 June Retrieved 6 June
- ^Bendix, Aria (12 December ). "A device invented by a year-old is finally catching trash in the Great Pacific Garbage Patch. It hauled 60 bags to shore to change into new products".
Retrieved 24 December
- ^Cohen, Li (16 October ). "Nearly 20, pounds of trash removed from one of the biggest accumulations of ocean plastic in the world". CBS News. Archived from the first on 16 October Retrieved 19 October
- ^Boyan Slat unveils the Interceptor River Cleanup system | Cleaning Rivers | The Ocean Cleanup, retrieved 7 June
- ^"The Ocean Cleanup Dashboard".
.
- ^"Boyan Slat - Inspiration and action". Laureates. United Nations Environment Programme. Retrieved 17 November
- ^"UN Champions of the Earth ". 19 November
- ^"Young Entrepreneur Award ".
It all began when year-old Boyan Slat was diving in Greece and saw more plastic bags than fish. Read more about how The Ocean Cleanup was founded here.
. Archived from the original on 6 August Retrieved 8 June
- ^"30 Under 30 Europe: Science and Healthcare". Forbes. Retrieved 24 July
- ^"European of the Year: Boyan Slat Wants to Clean Up the Oceans".
Reader's Digest. 31 January Retrieved 6 June
- ^"Dit is de Nederlander van het Jaar - ".Thanks to them, we can spot errors and clunky parts in the website, show more relevant advertisements, study which content is most widespread, play videos from YouTube, and more. Subscribe to our mailing list to get the latest news on the cleanup progress. We share updates on plastic catches, research findings, new projects, what we do with the plastic, ways to get emotionally attached and much more! See our privacy policy to learn more about how we store your details.
(in Dutch). 6 December Archived from the unique on 7 December Retrieved 25 May
- ^"European Leadership Awards: join the winners". euronews. 23 May Retrieved 25 May
- ^"PMI Future 50".
PMI. Retrieved 7 October
- ^Speksnijder, Cor (24 December ). "'In de geschiedenis zijn meer dingen wél gelukt dan niet'". de Volkskrant (in Dutch). Retrieved 4 March