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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE JUNK Raft Promoting The Perils Of Plastic On Display At Seattle Boat ShowRaft built from 15,000 plastic bottles and other debris sailed from California to HawaiiVisit Puget Soundkeeper Alliance on the Junk Raft at the Seattle Boat Show Seattle, Washington Jan 23, 2009Contact: Lisa Samuelson SEATTLE – Plastic is forever, and it’s everywhere. And nowhere is it worse than in what’s known as the North Pacific Gyre – the waters north of Hawaii – where there is now more plastic, by weight, than plankton. It’s a huge region of circling currents that concentrate the debris, thousands of miles from land. This floating plastic trash now drifting in the oceans interrupts the feeding of marine life (birds choke on plastic trash, plankton ingest microscopic particles of plastics) and plastics release toxins into the water. That’s the message that Eco-mariner Joel Paschal is hoping to bring to attendees of the 62nd Annual Seattle Boat Show www.seattleboatshow.com, January 23rd to February 1st. In order to raise awareness of the issue, Paschal partnered with Algalita Marine Research Foundation (AMRF) and designed and built a raft constructed from 15,000 plastic bottles, derelict sailboat masts and fishing nets, a solar generator, a wind turbine, and the fuselage of a Cessna aircraft. In the summer of 2008, Paschal along with Marcus Eriksen of AMRF, sailed the JUNK raft www.junkraft.com for 88 days and 2,600 miles (surviving four hurricanes) through plastic impacted water from California to Hawaii. The Northwest Marine Trade Association (NMTA) in turn has partnered with Puget Soundkeeper Alliance to bring the JUNK raft to the Seattle Boat Show with the goal of educating the Seattle community about the effects of plastic pollution in the marine environment and what can be done to solve this rapidly growing problem. ### |
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