
By Gerard Dooly, College of Limerick
Plastic air pollution is a kind of issues everybody can see, but few know easy methods to deal with it successfully. I grew up strolling the seashores round Tramore in County Waterford, Eire, the place plastic particles has all the time been a part of the shoreline, together with bottles, fragments of fishing gear and meals packaging.
In line with the UN, yearly 19-23 million tonnes of plastic winds up in lakes, rivers and seas, and it has a big impact on ecosystems, creating air pollution and damaging animal habitats.
Neighborhood teams do great work cleansing these seashores, however they’re basically strolling blind, guessing the place plastic accumulates, lacking sizzling spots, repeating the identical stretches whereas drawback areas could go untouched.
Years later, working in marine robotics on the College of Limerick, I started growing instruments to help marine clean-up and assist communities discover plastic air pollution alongside our shoreline.
The query appeared easy: might we use drones to point out folks precisely the place the plastic is? And will we flip discovering the plastic littered on seashores and cleansing it up into one thing folks take pleasure in – in different phrases, “gamify” it? Might we additionally construct on different ways in which drones have been used beforehand similar to monitoring wildfires or figuring out shipwrecks.
Constructing the know-how
On the College of Limerick’s Centre for Robotics and Clever Methods, my staff mixed drone-based aerial surveillance work with machine-learning algorithms (a kind of synthetic intelligence) to map the place plastic was being littered, and this paired with a free cellular app that gives volunteers with exact GPS coordinates for focused clean-up.
The technical problem was extra complicated than it appeared. Coaching laptop imaginative and prescient fashions to detect a bottle cap from 30 metres altitude, whereas distinguishing it from comparable objects like seaweed, driftwood, shells and weathered rocks, required in depth area testing and checks of the accuracy of the detection system.
The growth hasn’t been easy. Early variations of the algorithm struggled with shadows and confused driftwood for plastic bottles. We spent months refining the system by way of trial and error on seashores round Clare and Galway so the system can now spot plastic as small as 1cm.
We performed a whole bunch of check flights throughout Irish coastlines beneath various environmental situations, totally different lighting, tidal states, climate patterns, constructing a sturdy coaching dataset.
Eire’s plastic drawback
The urgency of this work turns into clear while you have a look at the Marine Institute’s work. Eire’s 3,172 kilometres of shoreline, the longest per capita in Europe, faces a deepening disaster.
A 2018 examine discovered that 73% of deep-sea fish in Irish waters had ingested plastic particles. Greater than 250 species, together with seabirds, fish, marine turtles and mammals have all been reported to ingest massive gadgets of plastics.
The prices transcend harming wildlife, and the financial influence might be important.
Our drone surveys revealed that some stretches of coast accumulate plastic at charges 5 to 10 instances larger than neighbouring areas, pushed by ocean currents and river mouths. With out systematic monitoring, these hotspots go unaddressed.
Making the know-how accessible
The plastic detection platform accepts drone imagery from any supply, similar to peculiar folks flying their very own drones.
Processing requires solely customary laptop computer software program. Customers add footage and obtain GPS coordinates displaying detected plastic areas. The cellular app, obtainable free on iOS and Android, shows these areas as an interactive map.

Neighborhood teams, colleges and people can see close by plastic air pollution and discover it, saving quite a lot of time.
It has already been examined with 5 group teams round Eire with optimistic outcomes, averaging 30 plastics noticed per ten-minute drone flight, various by location.
Working by way of the EU-funded BluePoint challenge, which is tackling plastic air pollution of coastlines round Europe, we’ve distributed over 30 drones to companions throughout Eire and Europe, together with county councils and environmental organisations.
The know-how has been deployed in areas together with Spanish Level in County Clare, the place the native Tidy Cities group (litter-picking volunteers), had been named joint Clear Coast Neighborhood Group of the Yr 2024.
Organising a litter choose. Video by Propeller BIC (Waterford).
The broader waste story
That is a part of a broader European effort to deal with plastic air pollution. Companions such because the sports activities retailer Decathlon are exploring easy methods to rework recovered seashore plastics into new client merchandise – sports activities gear, textiles and elements.
The problem isn’t simply assortment. Seashore plastics arrive contaminated with sand and salt, in blended sorts and grades. Our ongoing analysis characterises what’s really discovered on Irish coastlines, offering producers with information to design applicable sorting and recycling processes.
The open supply software program platforms and the drone know-how have already been utilized in 9 international locations, partaking greater than 2,000 folks. Pilot programmes are operating in France, Spain, Portugal, Brazil and the UK. What started as a query about making seashore clean-ups simpler has advanced right into a sensible system connecting citizen motion to environmental outcomes.
Neighborhood suggestions from pilots has been overwhelmingly optimistic. Teams report that the drone-derived GPS coordinates rework clean-up work. One taking part Tidy Cities group stated that volunteers now head straight to flagged areas.
Teams have additionally reported elevated participation, the gamification side appeals to households and individuals who won’t volunteer in any other case. Moreover, the information we’ve gathered thus far is being utilized by native authorities to know litter patterns and inform coverage choices round waste administration and coastal safety.![]()
Gerard Dooly, Assistant Professor in Engineering, College of Limerick
This text is republished from The Dialog beneath a Inventive Commons license. Learn the unique article.
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The Dialog
is an impartial supply of reports and views, sourced from the tutorial and analysis group and delivered direct to the general public.

