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Washed ashore and reborn: Fishing gear and plastics get new life

June 10, 2025 — Commercial fisheries entities are collaborating with a rising star in plastics recycling, Net Your Problem, to keep thousands of pounds of worn-out fishing gear and washed-ashore plastic debris out of landfills and get it refurbished into useful products.

“Fishing gear doesn’t last forever, but it also doesn’t have to go to waste,” said Tim Fitzgerald, chief sustainability officer at American Seafoods, part of the catcher-processor sector of the Alaska pollock industry. “As we continuously improve our nets and gear, it is encouraging to know that the gear that has served one useful purpose can now serve another one,” he said.

American Seafoods collaborated on May 28 with Arctic Storm Management Group, Coastal Villages Region Fund, Glacier Fish Company, and 150 volunteers for an inaugural net recycling day at the Port of Seattle’s Terminal 9, each spending several hours to clean one of their groundfish nets, which yield on average 20,000 pounds of plastic.

“The nets are expensive enough that we take very good care of them,” said Fitzgerald. “We try to use them as long as possible.” As for the event itself, “we are really excited about it,” he said.

Read the full article at The National Fisherman

Discarded fishing gear repurposed into cables

May 9, 2024 — It’s a staggering fact that approximately 1 million tons of abandoned, lost, and discarded fishing gear (ALDFG) find their way into the world’s oceans every year. This ALDFG significantly threatens marine life, primarily contributing to ocean plastic pollution. ABB Installation Products, a company helping with the environmental crisis, has taken the lead in developing groundbreaking cable protection solutions made from 50% recycled polyamide, primarily sourced from salvaged fishing nets. ABB is a technology leader in electrification and automation, enabling a more sustainable and resource-efficient future.

Representing a sustainable departure from traditional plastic-based systems, ABB’s PMA EcoGuard PA6 RPPA conduit not only safeguards vital power and data cables but also necessitates less energy and water during production, thereby reducing upstream Scope 3 greenhouse gas emissions by 30% and reducing net freshwater consumption by 50%. Scope 3 emissions result from activities from assets that are not explicitly owned or controlled by the reporting organization. However, that specific organization indirectly affects its value chain.

Yahoo News shared that high-performance wire and cable protection is essential to powering electrical systems safely and reliably. PMA EcoGuard is part of ABB’s EcoSolutions line, which helps its customers make more sustainable decisions. Each product in this line shows circularity value, and the environmental impact is fully transparent. They carry an external third-party verified Lifecycle Assessment.

Read the full article at National Fisherman

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