1682478-poster-1280-plasticbags By MichaelisScientists - Own work, CC BY-SA 4.0
1682478-poster-1280-plasticbags By MichaelisScientists - Own work, CC BY-SA 4.0

Satellite images used to detect plastic pollution floating in our oceans

Embargoed until: Publicly released:

UK and Greek scientists have developed a new method of detecting patches of floating macroplastics - debris larger than 5 millimetres - based on satellite images captured by the European Space Agency Sentinel-2 satellites. They were able to distinguish plastic from other materials accurately nearly nine times out of ten. Plastics are detected based on how they absorb and reflect light and heat. An artificial intelligence then scans the images and reports on plastic pollution. The scientists tested the system in four different coastal locations, and say satellite data could be combined with drone footage to help track and address our plastic pollution problem.

Journal/conference: Scientific Reports

Link to research (DOI): 10.1038/s41598-020-62298-z

Organisation/s: Plymouth Marine Laboratory, UK

Funder: NERC ACCORD (Addressing Challenges of Coastal Communities through Ocean Research for Developing Economies), ESA OPTIMAL (Optical Methods for Marine Litter detection) General Studies Programme, NERC Earth Observation Data Acquisition and Analysis Service (NEODAAS).

Media Release

From: Springer Nature

Satellite data used to detect marine plastic

A new method of detecting patches of floating macroplastics ― larger than 5 millimetres ― in marine environments is presented in Scientific Reports this week. The approach, which uses data from the European Space Agency Sentinel-2 satellites, is able to distinguish plastics from other materials with 86% accuracy.

Lauren Biermann and colleagues identified patches of floating debris from Sentinel-2 data based on their spectral signatures ― the wavelengths of visible and infrared light they absorbed and reflected.

The authors then trained a machine-learning algorithm to classify the individual materials that made up these patches according to the specific spectral signatures of different plastic and natural materials. These signatures were obtained from satellite data on plastic litter washed up in the Durban Harbour in South Africa on 24 April 2019 and floating plastic deployed by the authors off the coast of Mytilene (Greece) in 2018 and 2019. They also used previously obtained satellite data on natural materials likely to be found together with marine plastic, such as seaweed, woody debris, foam and volcanic rock.

The authors tested their method on Sentinel-2 data from coastal waters in four different locations: Accra (Ghana), the Gulf islands (Canada), Da Nang (Vietnam) and east Scotland (UK). The method successfully distinguished plastics from other floating materials or seawater with an average accuracy of 86% across the four locations and 100% accuracy off the Gulf islands.

The findings demonstrate that the method was successful across four different coastal areas. The authors hope that it could be used with drones or high-resolution satellites to improve global monitoring of marine plastic littering and aid clean-up operations

Attachments:

Note: Not all attachments are visible to the general public

  • Springer Nature
    Web page
    The URL will go live after the embargo ends

News for:

International

Media contact details for this story are only visible to registered journalists.