The surprising solution to ocean plastic David Katz

We’ve had it all wrong.

Everybody.

We’ve had it all wrong.

The very last thing we need to do

is clean the ocean.

Very last.

Yeah, there is a garbage truck of plastic

entering the ocean

every minute

of every hour of every day.

And countless birds and animals

are dying just from encountering plastic.

We are experiencing
the fastest rate of extinction ever,

and plastic is in the food chain.

And I’m still here,
standing in front of you,

telling you the very last
thing we need to do

is clean the ocean.

Very last.

If you were to walk into a kitchen,

sink overflowing,

water spilling all over the floor,

soaking into the walls,

you had to think fast,
you’re going to panic;

you’ve got a bucket, a mop or a plunger.

What do you do first?

Why don’t we turn off the tap?

It would be pointless to mop

or plunge or scoop up the water

if we don’t turn off the tap first.

Why aren’t we doing the same
for the ocean?

Even if the Ocean Cleanup project,

beach plastic recycling programs

or any well-meaning

ocean plastic company

was a hundred percent successful,

it would still be too little, too late.

We’re trending to produce
over 300 million ton

of plastic this year.

Roughly eight million ton

are racing to flow into the ocean

to join the estimated
150 million ton already there.

Reportedly, 80 percent of ocean plastic

is coming from those countries
that have extreme poverty.

And if you live in the grips of poverty

concerned, always, about food

or shelter

or a sense of security,

recycling –

it’s beyond your realm of imagination.

And that is exactly why

I created the Plastic Bank.

We are the world’s largest chain of stores

for the ultra-poor,

where everything in the store
is available to be purchased

using plastic garbage.

Everything.

School tuition.

Medical insurance.

Wi-Fi, cell phone minutes, power.

Sustainable cooking fuel,
high-efficiency stoves.

And we keep wanting to add everything else

that the world may need and can’t afford.

Our chain of stores in Haiti
are more like community centers,

where one of our collectors,

Lise Nasis,

has the opportunity to earn a living

by collecting material from door to door,

from the streets,

from business to business.

And at the end of her day,
she gets to bring the material back to us,

where we weigh it,
we check it for quality,

and we transfer the value
into her account.

Lise now has a steady,

reliable source of income.

And that value we transfer
into an online account for her.

And because it’s a savings account,
it becomes an asset

that she can borrow against.

And because it’s online,

she has security against robbery,

and I think more importantly,

she has a new sense of worth.

And even the plastic

has a new sense of value.

Hm.

And that plastic we collect,

and we add value to,

we sort it,

we remove labels,

we remove caps.

We either shred it

or we pack it into bales
and get it ready for export.

Now, it’s no different
than walking over acres of diamonds.

If Lise was to walk over acres of diamonds

but there was no store, no bank,

no way to use the diamonds,
no way to exchange them,

they’d be worthless, too.

And Lise was widowed

after the 2010 Haitian earthquake,

left homeless without an income.

And as a result of the program,

Lise can afford her two
daughters' school tuition

and uniforms.

Now, that plastic

we sell.

We sell it to suppliers of great brands

like Marks and Spencer,

who have commissioned
the use of social plastic

in their products.

Or like Henkel,

the German consumer-goods company,

who are using social plastic
directly into their manufacturing.

We’ve closed the loop

in the circular economy.

Now buy shampoo

or laundry detergent

that has social plastic packaging,

and you are indirectly contributing

to the extraction of plastic
from ocean-bound waterways

and alleviating poverty

at the same time.

And that model

is completely replicable.

In São Paulo,

a church sermon encourages parishioners

to not just bring offering on Sunday,

but the recycling, too.

We then match the church with the poor.

Or, I believe more powerfully,

we could match a mosque in London
with an impoverished church in Cairo.

Or like in Vancouver,

with our bottle-deposit program:

now any individual

or any group

can now return

their deposit-refundable recyclables,

and instead of taking back the cash,

they have the opportunity
to deposit that value

into the account of the poor
around the world.

We can now use our recycling

to support and create recyclers.

One bottle deposited at home

could help extract
hundreds around the world.

Or, like Shell,

the energy company,

who’s invested in our
plastic-neutral program.

Plastic neutrality is like carbon-neutral.

But plastic neutrality invests
in recycling infrastructure

where it doesn’t exist.

And it provides an incentive for the poor

by providing a price increase.

Or –

like in the slums of Manila,

where the smallest market

with a simple scale and a phone

can now accept social plastic

as a new form of payment by weight,

allowing them to serve more people

and have their own greater social impact.

And what’s common here

is that social plastic

is money.

Social plastic is money,

a globally recognizable and tradable
currency that, when used,

alleviates poverty
and cleans the environment

at the same time.

It’s not just plastic.

It’s not recycled plastic,
it’s social plastic,

a material whose value is transferred

through the lives
of the people who encounter it,

rich and poor.

Humans have produced

over eight trillion kilograms of plastic,

most of it still here as waste.

Eight trillion kilograms.

Worth roughly 50 cents a kilo,

we’re potentially unleashing
a four-trillion-dollar value.

See, I see social plastic

as the Bitcoin for the earth –

(Laughter)

and available for everyone.

Now the entire ecosystem
is managed and supported

through an online banking platform

that provides for the safe,
authentic transfer of value globally.

You can now deposit your recyclables
in Vancouver or Berlin,

and a family could withdraw
building bricks or cell phone minutes

in the slums of Manila.

Or Lise –

she could deposit recycling
at a center in Port-au-Prince,

and her mother could withdraw
cooking fuel or cash

across the city.

And the app adds rewards,

incentives,

group prizes,

user rating.

We’ve gamified recycling.

We add fun and formality

into an informal industry.

We’re operating in Haiti
and the Philippines.

We’ve selected staff

and partners for Brazil.

And this year, we’re committing
to India and Ethiopia.

We’re collecting hundreds

and hundreds of tons of material.

We continue to add partners

and customers,

and we increase our collection
volumes every day.

Now as a result
of our program with Henkel,

they’ve committed to use
over 100 million kilograms

of material every year.

That alone will put
hundreds of millions of dollars

into the hands of the poor

in the emerging economies.

And so now,

we can all

be a part of the solution

and not the pollution.

And so, OK, maybe
cleaning the ocean is futile.

It might be.

But preventing ocean plastic

could be humanity’s richest opportunity.

Thank you.

(Applause)

我们都错了。

大家。

我们都错了。

我们需要做的最后一件事

是清洁海洋。

非常最后。

是的,每天每时每刻都有一辆塑料垃圾车

进入海洋

无数鸟类和动物

因接触塑料而死亡。

我们正在
经历有史以来最快的灭绝速度

,塑料在食物链中。

而我还在这里,
站在你面前,

告诉你
我们需要做的最后一件事

就是清洁海洋。

非常最后。

如果你走进厨房,

水槽溢出,

水溅满地板,

浸透墙壁,

你必须快速思考,
你会惊慌失措;

你有一个桶、一个拖把或一个柱塞。

你先做什么?

我们为什么不关掉水龙头? 如果

我们不先关掉水龙头,那么拖地

、倒水或舀水都是没有意义的

为什么我们不为海洋做同样的事情

即使海洋清洁项目、

海滩塑料回收计划

或任何善意的

海洋塑料

公司百分百成功

,也为时已晚。

今年我们的塑料产量趋势将
超过 3 亿吨

大约 800 万吨

正竞相流入海洋,

以加入估计
已经存在的 1.5 亿吨。

据报道,80% 的海洋

塑料来自
那些极度贫困的国家。

如果你生活在贫困之中

,总是担心食物

或住所

或安全感,

循环利用——

这超出了你的想象。

这正是

我创建塑料银行的原因。

我们是世界上最大

的超穷人连锁店,

店里的所有东西
都可以

用塑料垃圾购买。

一切。

学校学费。

医疗保险。

Wi-Fi、手机通话时间、电量。

可持续烹饪燃料,
高效炉灶。

我们一直想添加

世界可能需要但买不起的所有其他东西。

我们在海地的连锁店
更像是社区中心,

我们的一位收藏家

Lise Nasis

有机会

通过挨家挨户、

从街头、

从企业到企业收集材料来谋生。

在她一天结束的时候,
她将材料带回给

我们,我们在那里称重,
检查质量,

然后将价值
转入她的账户。

Lise 现在拥有稳定、

可靠的收入来源。

我们将这个价值转移
到她的在线账户中。

而且因为它是一个储蓄账户,
它成为

她可以借用的资产。

而且因为是在线的,所以

她有防盗的安全感,

而且我认为更重要的是,

她有了新的价值感。

甚至塑料

也有了新的价值感。

嗯。

我们收集的塑料

,我们增加价值,

我们分类,

我们移除标签,

我们移除盖子。

我们要么将其切碎,要么将其

打包成包
并准备出口。

现在,这
与走过数英亩的钻石没什么不同。

如果莉丝走过几英亩的钻石,

但没有商店,没有银行,

没有办法使用这些钻石,也
没有办法交换它们

,它们也将一文不值。

Lise

在 2010 年海地地震后丧偶,

无家可归,没有收入。

由于该计划,

Lise 可以负担她两个
女儿的学费

和校服。

现在,

我们卖的塑料。

我们将其出售给 Marks and Spencer 等知名品牌的供应商

他们已委托

在其产品中使用社会塑料。

或者像

德国消费品公司 Henkel 一样

,直接在制造中使用社会塑料

我们已经关闭了

循环经济的循环。

现在购买

带有社会塑料包装的洗发水或洗衣粉

,你间接地为

从海洋水道中提取塑料

和减轻

贫困做出了贡献。

该模型

是完全可复制的。

在圣保罗,

一场教堂布道鼓励教区

居民不仅在周日带来奉献

,还包括回收利用。

然后我们将教会与穷人相匹配。

或者,我认为更有力的是,

我们可以将伦敦的一座清真寺
与开罗的一座贫困教堂相提并论。

或者像在温哥华,

通过我们的瓶装存款计划:

现在任何个人

或任何团体

现在都可以退回

他们的可退还押金的可回收物品,

而不是拿回现金,

他们有机会将
这些价值

存入周围穷人的账户
世界。

我们现在可以利用我们的回收

来支持和创建回收商。

放在家里的一瓶

可以帮助
在世界各地提取数百个。

或者,像壳牌这样

投资于我们的
塑料中和计划的能源公司。

塑料中性就像碳中和。

但是塑料中立投资

不存在的回收基础设施。

通过提价来激励穷人。

或者——

就像在马尼拉的贫民窟一样,这个

拥有简单秤和电话的最小市场

现在可以接受社会塑料

作为一种新的按重量支付的方式,

从而使他们能够为更多的人服务

并产生更大的社会影响。

这里的共同点

是,社会塑料

就是金钱。

社会塑料就是金钱,

是一种全球认可和可交易的
货币,在使用时可以

减轻贫困
并同时清洁环境

它不仅仅是塑料。

它不是再生塑料,
而是社会塑料,

这种材料的价值

通过
遇到它的人的生活而转移,无论

贫富。

人类已经生产

了超过 8 万亿公斤的塑料,

其中大部分仍然作为废物。

八万亿公斤。

每公斤价值大约 50 美分,

我们可能会
释放 4 万亿美元的价值。

看,我把社会塑料

看作是地球的比特币——

(笑声

)每个人都可以使用。

现在,整个生态系统

通过在线银行平台进行管理和支持,该平台

提供安全、
真实的全球价值转移。

您现在可以将可回收物品存放
在温哥华或柏林

,一个家庭可以在马尼拉的贫民窟中提取
积木或手机通话时间

或者莉丝——

她可以将回收物存放
在太子港的一个中心

,她的母亲可以在整个城市提取
烹饪燃料或现金

并且应用程序增加了奖励、

激励、

团体奖、

用户评分。

我们已经将回收游戏化。

我们为非正式行业增添乐趣和形式

我们在海地
和菲律宾开展业务。

我们为巴西挑选了员工

和合作伙伴。

今年,我们将
致力于印度和埃塞俄比亚。

我们正在收集

成百上千吨的材料。

我们不断增加合作伙伴

和客户,

并且每天都在增加我们的收集
量。

现在,
由于我们与汉高的计划,

他们承诺每年使用
超过 1 亿公斤

的材料。

仅这一点就将
数亿美元

送到

新兴经济体的穷人手中。

所以现在,

我们都

可以成为解决方案的一部分,

而不是污染。

所以,好吧,也许
清洁海洋是徒劳的。

有可能。

但防止海洋塑料

可能是人类最富有的机会。

谢谢你。

(掌声)