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Cleanup recovers 4,700 pounds of plastic pollution from Kahakuloa

By Staff | May 14, 2021

Love The Sea held the Hard to Reach coastal cleanup on April 27. PHOTO BY JENNICA LOWELL FOR LOVE THE SEA.

KAHAKULOA — On April 27, Maui nonprofit Love The Sea embarked on a Hard to Reach (H2R) coastal cleanup of Kahakuloa.

During the half-day cleanup mission, volunteers using their own jet skis and private vessels recovered 4,700 pounds of plastic pollution, mostly derelict fishing gear, along the four-mile stretch of Maui’s northwest coastline.

Led by Love The Sea Executive Director Campbell Farrell, the H2R coastal cleanup of Kahakuloa featured several familiar faces, including Love The Sea ambassador and world-champion waterman Kai Lenny, world-champion windsurfer Jason Polakow, Hawaiian waterman Austin Kalama and travel influencer Garrett Gee of The Bucket List Family.

Volunteers from Hawaii Wildlife Fund and Hawaiian Islands Land Trust also joined the cause.

“The mission of our Hard to Reach cleanups is to take action against plastic pollution that impacts our wildlife through entanglement, strangulation, ingestion and ultimately extinction,” said Farrell. “We’d like to thank our all-star crew of Love The Sea volunteers for helping us safely complete this mission at Kahakuloa, cleaning one of Maui’s precious but often forgotten coastlines.”

Farrell estimates 95 percent of the plastic recovered from the ocean was discarded from commercial fishing vessels, including fishing floats, buoys, nets and line debris. The remaining plastic items recovered were consumer products like boogie boards, kayaks, apparel, footwear and plastic bottles.

In an effort to divert more waste from Maui’s landfill, the bags of debris were hauled to Love The Sea’s baseyard to sort and repurpose. Once 50,000 pounds has been collected, it will be packed into a container and shipped to Parley on Oahu to be recycled or used for energy.

Love The Sea is dedicated to monitoring and cleaning the coastal regions of Maui County and beyond, and aims to coordinate four H2R coastal cleanups annually.

Each H2R cleanup is a massive effort removing approximately 1,200 pounds of plastic from the ocean environment per hour of picking, with roughly two dozen volunteers per cleanup. H2R cleanups are made possible through sponsorships and private donations.

To donate to Love The Sea’s H2R cleanups, visit www.lovethesea.org.

Sponsors for Love The Sea’s H2R coastal cleanup of Kahakuloa included Dos Gardenias, Elite Island Construction, Lindblad Expeditions, The Bucket List Family, Greenwave Productions, Silverback Hawaii, The Lenny Family, and HI Tech Surf Sports.

Love The Sea is a nonprofit organization co-founded in 2015 by Farrell, a passionate waterman who decided to make a change for the well-being of our ocean and its inhabitants. The vision of Love The Sea is to live in a world where the ocean is healthy and abundant with life — not plastic.

Love The Sea is on a mission with coalition partners to monitor and clean every oceanfront mile in the Hawaiian Islands and beyond. For more information, visit www.lovethesea.org.