The patch s precise size is not known, but some scientists estimate it to be twice the size of Texas. (ANDREA MASCHIETTO MERCURY NEWS ) Source: NOAA. (Click on image to enlarge.)
increase the use of plant-based, biodegradable plastic and to beef up plastics-recycling programs. Designing storm drains to catch plastic debris also is a possibility, he said.

 

"We're not talking about a plastic-bag tax," he said. "We need to move the needle beyond that."

The garbage patch is emerging as a major international environmental concern. Not only do its plastics pose a potential chemical threat, but birds, sea turtles and other marine life die when they eat or become entangled in floating plastic. Invasive species such as crabs, barnacles and other marine life also can attach themselves to it and float across the globe.

In the central Pacific, there are up to six pounds of marine litter for every pound of plankton, according to a 2006 report from the United Nations Environment Programme. And roughly 46,000 pieces of plastic litter are floating on every square mile of the oceans there, the report found.

John Chen, a spokesman for the Bureau of International Recycling, an industry group that contributed to the trip's costs, cited fees placed on bottles and new computers under California laws that help cover recycling costs. He said such fees may be a model for recycling all plastic products.

Research papers from the expedition will not be published for several months. But Mary Crowley, a Sausalito resident who owns a yacht chartering company, Ocean Voyages, and who cofounded Project Kaisei, said time is of the essence.

"The floating pieces of plastic — large and small — are like a spreading cancer on the ocean," she said. "It's impossible for me to think of what the ocean might be like in another 30 years if we don't change."

Contact Paul Rogers at 408-920-5045.