国产麻豆

Off the coast of Catalonia, an intriguing experiment in the circular聽economy聽is taking place. Dozens of fishing vessels are heading out to sea and bringing back tons of plastic waste alongside their usual haul. The plastic is then used as the raw material to make recycled designer sunglasses for Barcelona-based聽company, Sea2see.

Thanks to agreements with 22 Catalonian port authorities, the company helps fishermen across the region bring in around a ton of plastic waste every three days. Thanks to agreements with 22 Catalonian port authorities, the company helps fishermen across the region bring in around a tonne of plastic waste every three days.

About 10kg of waste is collected for each pair of glasses it sells. Sea2see separates what it can use for the glasses and the rest is sold off to other companies for use in different processes such as manufacturing nylon thread.
More than 90 per cent of the material the fishermen collect can be recycled, though items such as metallic ship ropes prove difficult, the company鈥檚 founder Francois Van den Abeele says. Usable plastic is reformed into pellets, which are then melted and used to make the glasses by Sea2see鈥檚 partner in Italy.

鈥淔ishermen have had a bad reputation for contributing to ocean pollution by discarding their nets, so they are really proud to be a part of what we are doing,鈥澛燰an聽den Abeele tells聽The Independent.聽鈥淭he aim is that everything that goes out to sea comes back to shore, which has not always happened before.鈥

The nets that trawling boats frequently leave in the sea act as magnets for the聽8 million tons of plastic detritus estimated to be thrown into the world鈥檚 oceans each year. They create islands of waste that trap hundreds of thousands of sea mammals and fish. Plastic is also ingested by aquatic animals, such as sea turtles, who mistake it for viable food.

鈥淚鈥檝e lived a lot of my life by the sea, around the oceans,鈥 Van den Abeele says. 鈥淪o I鈥檝e been aware of the problem for some time.鈥 Van den Abeele worked for many years making documentaries in places such as Angola, which at the time had just exited 30 years of civil war. 鈥淲e went to places that had experienced really difficult times and tried to show the positive stories,鈥 he says.

As a filmmaker by trade, he admits that just a couple of years ago he 鈥渄idn鈥檛 have a clue鈥 about the eyewear industry, but he knew he wanted to create a brand that had a social impact.

鈥淚鈥檝e got two kids and I see what鈥檚 happening to the planet,鈥 he says. 鈥淓yewear is a 鈧100bn-plus industry with big profit margins. The whole product is made of plastic, which can take hundreds of years to biodegrade, and yet almost nothing is being done about sustainability.

鈥淔ashion is the second most polluting industry in the world after oil and gas, but a lot of fashion companies鈥 sustainability efforts are just greenwash,鈥 he says.

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