Skip to main content

For $200, this nonprofit will harvest ocean microplastic and put it on your face

From Trash To Treasure - Producing The Final Product | Cleaning Oceans | The Ocean Cleanup

There’s a somewhat grizzly plot point in Fight Club about the protagonist turning discarded, liposuctioned human fat into soap, and then selling it back to the people who paid to have it extracted. That’s not an exact analog for the latest attention-grabbing tactic of the nonprofit Ocean Cleanup project — but it’s not a million miles away either.

The world’s oceans have a big problem when it comes to waste plastic. Approximately e8 million tons of plastic winds up in our oceans each year, making up by far the most abundant form of marine litter. In its quest to do something about it — and put the issue on even more people’s radar — the Ocean Cleanup project has been collecting up this discarded microplastic and transforming it into stylish, $199 sunglasses.

“The Ocean Cleanup Sunglasses are made from the plastic which the Ocean Cleanup collected in the Great Pacific Garbage Patch with its System 001/B in 2019,” a spokesperson for the group told Digital Trends. “It is the first-ever product to have been made from plastic … to have been taken out of the Great Pacific Garbage Patch. They are premium sunglasses, designed in California, made in Italy.”

Ocean Cleanup sunglasses
Ocean Cleanup

The sunglasses were created in partnership with sustainability designer Yves Béhar and Safilo, one of the leading companies in the eyewear industry.

Of course, there’s a limit to how much recycled plastic it takes to create a pair of sunglasses. But the use of recycled plastic is only part of the picture. “As we are a nonprofit, 100 percent of the proceeds go toward next year’s cleanup,” the spokesperson said. “The proceeds of one pair of sunglasses is predicted to allow us to clean 24 football fields worth of ocean.”

That’s not going to solve the problem overnight, but it’s one heck of a good start. The nonprofit notes that, if it sells every pair it’s created, it will allow for the cleaning of a half-million football fields worth of ocean. The sunglasses are available to purchase right now.

“We wanted to provide our supporters with a product that would last and that they would want to hold to for a long time,” the spokesperson told Digital Trends. “Because sunglasses are durable, useful, and — since we’re dependent on word-of-mouth to spread our mission — we hope that by making something that is often carried around, they can also help create awareness. With the proceeds from each product reinvested into our continued cleanup operations, each pair of sunglasses will make a tangible impact toward clean oceans.”

Editors' Recommendations

Luke Dormehl
I'm a UK-based tech writer covering Cool Tech at Digital Trends. I've also written for Fast Company, Wired, the Guardian…
It just became the perfect time to buy a last-gen Intel CPU
Intel Core i9-13900K held between fingertips.

In a surprising twist, Intel has just decided to discontinue its entire lineup of 13th-generation Raptor Lake CPUs, and it's happening faster than anyone might have expected. Who would have thought that Intel would bid farewell to some of its best processors so soon? While today is a sad day for Raptor Lake, the news is good for those wanting to buy a CPU -- while supplies last, that is.

The discontinuance applies to Intel's lineup of overclockable Raptor Lake processors, bar the 14th-gen refresh, of course. This means that CPUs like the Core i5-13600K are no longer in production and vendors will no longer be able to restock them as of May 24, 2024. This comes from an official product change notification document from Intel, which was spotted by Tom's Hardware. The full list of affected processors is as follows:

Read more
RTX 4090 owners are in for some bad news
Nvidia GeForce RTX 4090 GPU.

Nvidia's RTX 4090 remains the undisputed most powerful GPU on the market right now, despite being a year-and-a-half old. As such, you might think that reselling it later should be a breeze, not to mention that it should net you a nice amount of money -- but that is not always the case.

Wccftech reports that one owner of an MSI RTX 4090 tried to use the Micro Center GPU Trade-In Program to get some money back, and the GPU was valued at just $700 -- a mere 36% of the total cost of the graphics card.

Read more
Boston Dynamics retires its remarkable Atlas robot
Boston Dynamics' Atlas Robot

Farewell to HD Atlas

Boston Dynamics’ Atlas robot has been impressing us with its acrobatics and other antics over the last decade, but the company just announced that it's retiring the bipedal bot.

Read more