Team AkzoNobel sailors and AkzoNobel employees join forces at Sea Point beach clean in Cape Town

Monday, 04 December 2017


 


[Sunday, December 3, 2017]:  Volvo Ocean Race campaigner team AkzoNobel reaffirmed its commitment to protecting the world’s oceans from plastic waste this weekend when members of the sailing team and local AkzoNobel employees joined forces at a beach clean in Cape Town.

 

Team AkzoNobel sailors joined with AkzoNobel employees and their families for the Two Oceans Aquarium Beach Clean in Cape Town
Image © David Lichtneker/team AkzoNobel
DOWNLOAD

 

During the two-hour clean-up on Saturday December 2 organised by the Two Oceans Aquarium in Cape Town the sailors and AkzoNobel employees collected 11 large bags filled with plastic waste and other man-made rubbish from the beach at Sea Point.

The team AkzoNobel sailors took part in the beach clean on the final day of their recovery period after they arrived in Cape Town from Lisbon a week earlier at the end of three weeks at sea on the second leg of the Volvo Ocean Race around-the-world.

 

DOWNLOAD VIDEO
SHARE: https://youtu.be/nmbFLptQhrI
EMBED: <iframe width="560" height="315" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/nmbFLptQhrI" frameborder="0" gesture="media" allow="encrypted-media" allowfullscreen></iframe>

 

First of the sailors on to the beach with a recyclable refuse sack was team AkzoNobel sail trimmer and passionate environmentalist, Martine Grael, accompanied by her mother Andrea – a veterinarian with lots of experience of the effects of plastic on marine animals.

To the casual glance the beach appeared free of any large items of rubbish, but closer inspection revealed a myriad number of smaller bits of plastic, such as bottle tops, straws, lolly pop sticks, and the stalks from cotton wool ear buds.

“When they end up in the sea things like that are just the size for animals to eat,” Grael explained. “They don’t go through the digestive system so they stay there. Or they end up as micro plastic and get into the food chain that way.”

 

Team AkzoNobel sail trimmer Martine Grael (BRA) collects plastic and other waste from Sea Point beach in Cape Town during the Two Oceans Aquarium beach clean
Image © David Lichtneker/team AkzoNobel
DOWNLOAD

 

Team AkzoNobel watch captain Chris Nicholson (AUS) said the problem of plastic in the ocean had been getting steadily worse over his twenty years as an ocean racing yachtsman.

“The beach looks clean from up on the promenade but when you come down here and have a microscopic look, you can see that it is anything but clean,” he said. “It’s always sobering to come and do this sort of thing.”

Peter van Niekerk (NED) – a helmsman and trimmer on the team AkzoNobel yacht – filled his bag mainly with plastic items. Some had been in plain view but others, almost hidden by the sand, had to be dug out.

“Here there’s a lot of it – old and new,” Niekerk said ruefully. “What we see out on the ocean when we are racing is pretty sad. On the last leg, every watch we would see at least one item of plastic – and often a lot more.

“Much of it is nets, ropes and buoys, but then you see a Coca Cola bottle out in the South Atlantic and you think: ‘where does it come from and how long has it been in the water?’ Sometimes it is covered in green already.”

 

Peter van Niekerk (NED), Emily Nagel (GBR/BER), Nicolai Sehested (DEN) and Brad Farrand (NZL) collect plastic and other waste during the Two Oceans Beach Clean at Sea Point in Cape Town
Image © David Lichtneker/team AkzoNobel
DOWNLOAD 

 

The sailing team’s owner and manager – global paints and coatings company AkzoNobel – has partnered with the innovative organisation The Ocean Cleanup on its mission to clear plastic waste from the world’s oceans using large-scale floating booms. 

AkzoNobel provides advanced biocide-free coatings technology for all the devices and equipment used in the mission.

Additionally, the team AkzoNobel Volvo Ocean 65 racing yacht carries a ‘The Ocean Cleanup’ logo on each side of its hull to help spread awareness around the world of the threat to the seas and oceans and the animals that live in them from the relentless incursion of plastic.

 

The team AkzoNobel Volvo Ocean 65 yacht carries The Ocean Cleanup logos on its stern quarters
Image © Thierry Martinez/team AkzoNobel 
DOWNLOAD

 

“As sailors, it’s a message that we all feel passionate about being associated with,” said team AkzoNobel navigator Jules Salter (GBR). “Few people directly see the effects of plastic and other ocean pollution more than us. 

“The important thing is that the word gets out about the damage being done to the seas and oceans. That’s why we are pleased to display The Ocean Cleanup’s logo on the boat and to be able to get involved with events like today’s beach clean.”

 

 

 

For further information, please contact:
Emily Caroe (+44 7785 565929)
or
Justin Chisholm (+44 7408 838815)

Media Library
To download images register here

NOTES TO EDITORS
About team AkzoNobel:
Team AkzoNobel is a professional ocean racing team challenging for the 2017-18 edition of the Volvo Ocean Race around the world. The team is owned and managed by leading global paints and coatings company AkzoNobel and led by Dutch skipper Simeon Tienpont – a double America’s Cup winner and two-time Volvo Ocean Race competitor.

About AkzoNobel:
AkzoNobel creates everyday essentials to make people's lives more liveable and inspiring. As a leading global paints and coatings company and a major producer of specialty chemicals, we supply essential ingredients, essential protection and essential color to industries and consumers worldwide. Backed by a pioneering heritage, our innovative products and sustainable technologies are designed to meet the growing demands of our fast-changing planet, while making life easier.

Headquartered in Amsterdam, the Netherlands, we have approximately 46,000 people in around 80 countries, while our portfolio includes well-known brands such as Dulux, Sikkens, International, Interpon and Eka. Consistently ranked as a leader in sustainability, we are dedicated to energizing cities and communities while creating a protected, colorful world where life is improved by what we do. 

Presented by Cathy McLeanhttp://www.bymnews

BYM where the news is read.

1.5 Million News items opened Jan. 1- Apr. 30 2017

Our readership http://www.bymnews.com/pdf/january-june-2017-statistics.pdf

Two for the price of one a place on one of our 3 carousels plus a PDF in BYM magazine, embedded images included Just $42.50 PCM

Detailshttp://www