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  • 26
    Nov
    2012
    4:44am, EST

    Turning garbage 'into gold': Nepali artists transform Everest litter into art

    Reuters

    A visitor takes a closer look at art made from trash picked from Mount Everest at a visual art symposium in Kathmandu on Nov. 20.

    By Reuters

    KATHMANDU, Nepal -- Fifteen Nepali artists were closeted for a month with a heap of 1.5 tons of trash picked up from Mount Everest. When they emerged, they had transformed the litter into art.


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    The 75 sculptures, including one of a yak and another of wind chimes, were made from empty oxygen bottles, gas canisters, food cans, torn tents, ropes, crampons, boots, plates, twisted aluminium ladders and torn plastic bags dumped by climbers over decades on the slopes of the world's highest mountain.

    Kripa Rana Shahi, director of art group Da Mind Tree, said the sculpting -- and a resulting recent exhibition in the Nepali capital of Kathmandu -- was aimed at spreading awareness about keeping Mount Everest clean.

    "Everest is our crown jewel in the world," Shahi said. "We should not take it for granted. The amount of trash there is damaging our pride."

    Nearly 4,000 people have climbed the 29,035-foot Mount Everest, many of them several times, since it was first scaled by New Zealander Sir Edmund Hillary and Tenzing Norgay Sherpa in 1953.

    Although climbers need to deposit $4,000 with the government, which is refunded only after they provide proof of having brought the garbage generated by them from the mountain, activists say effective monitoring is difficult.

    PhotoBlog: Nepali teen says she is youngest woman to climb Mount Everest

    Climbers returning from the mountain say its slopes are littered with trash, which is buried under the snow during the winter and comes out in the summer when the snow melts.

    'Nothing goes to waste in art'
    The trash used in the art works was picked up from the mountain by Sherpa climbers in 2011 and earlier this year and carried down by porters and trains of long-haired yaks.

    Laurence Tan / Reuters, file

    A basket of garbage sits at Everest Base Camp, with the Himalayan range seen in the background, in May 2011.

    The yaks were commemorated in one work. For another, empty oxygen cylinders were mounted on a metal frame to make Buddhist prayer wheels.

    Another, by wall painter Krishna Bahadur Thing, is a Tibetan mandala painting showing the location of Mount Everest in the universe -- made by sticking yellow, blue and white pieces of discarded beer, food cans and other metals on a round board.

    Climbers hoping to conquer the world's tallest peak hit a bottleneck over the weekend when the weather cleared, which caused a greater number of climbers to attempt the same route without the ability to pass one another. NBC's Stephanie Gosk reports.

    Visitors said they were amazed at the way waste products were turned into useful items.

    "It shows that anything can be utilised in an artistic way and nothing goes to waste in art," said 18-year-old fine arts student Siddhartha Pudasaini.

    Complete World coverage on NBCNews.com

    The art is on sale for prices from $15 to $2,300, with part of the proceeds going to the artists and the rest to the Everest Summiteers' Association, which sponsored the collection of garbage from the mountain, organizers said.

    "Garbage on Everest is shameful. We are trying to turn it into gold here," association chief Wangchu Sherpa told Reuters.

    More world stories from NBC News:

    • Egypt's Morsi says he wants to stabilize country
    • More than 100 killed in Bangladesh factory fire
    • Drug gang bust in Honduras nets $100M assets
    • Irish editor who published pics of naked Kate Middleton resigns
    • Scientists rush to save manta rays, the 'pandas of the ocean'
    • Despite troubles at home, Egypt's Morsi is pivotal player in Mideast

    Follow World News from NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook

     

    Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

    21 comments

    I guess pictures are out of the question.

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    Explore related topics: art, everest, nepal, south-asia, garbage, featured, trash
  • 29
    May
    2012
    2:12pm, EDT

    Trash strewn around Barcelona airport as cleaning workers protest cuts

    Albert Gea / Reuters

    Cleaning staff workers toss pieces of papers during a protest at Barcelona's airport on Tuesday. Cleaning staff working for a company who have a contract with the airport demonstrated against pay and benefits cuts made by their employer.

    Albert Gea / Reuters

    Passengers line up in front of check-in desks during a protest by the cleaning staff at Barcelona's airport.

    Alberto Estevez / EPA

    A woman carries her luggage on an escalator at the Terminal 1 of El Prat airport in Barcelona.

    See more images from Spain in PhotoBlog.

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    2 comments

    At least the people in Spain and other European countries always stand up and fight. The people in the United States are too lazy, they just want to sit on their asses and don't stand up and fight.

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    Explore related topics: spain, airport, protest, world-news, barcelona, trash
  • 9
    May
    2012
    6:02am, EDT

    Study: Plastic in 'Great Pacific Garbage Patch' increases 100-fold

    Mario Aguilera / Scripps Institution of Oceanography

    SEAPLEX researchers encounter a large ghost net with tangled rope, net, plastic, and various biological organisms during a 2009 expedition in the Pacific gyre. Matt Durham (seen wearing a blue shirt) is pictured with Miriam Goldstein.

    By Ian Johnston, msnbc.com

    The amount of plastic trash in the "Great Pacific Garbage Patch" has increased 100-fold during the past 40 years, causing "profound" changes to the marine environment, according to a new study.

    Scientists from Scripps Institution of Oceanography in San Diego found that insects called "sea skaters" or "water striders" were using the trash as a place to lay their eggs in greater numbers than before.



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    In a paper published by the journal Biology Letters, researchers said this would have implications for other animals, the sea skaters' predators -- which include crabs --  and their food, which is mainly plankton and fish eggs.

    The scientists also pointed to a previous Scripps study that found nine percent of fish had plastic waste in their stomachs.

    The "Great Pacific Garbage Patch" -- which is roughly the size of Texas -- was created by plastic waste that finds its way into the sea and is then swept into one area, the North Pacific Subtropical Convergence Zone, by circulating ocean currents known as a gyre.

    NOAA

    This map shows the North Pacific Subtropical Convergence Zone within the North Pacific Gyre.

    The Scripps Environmental Accumulation of Plastic Expedition, known as SEAPLEX, traveled about 1,000 miles west of California in August 2009.

    Follow Ian Johnston

    A statement on Scripps' website said the scientists had "documented an alarming amount of human-generated trash, mostly broken down bits of plastic the size of a fingernail floating across thousands of miles of open ocean."

    Scripps graduate student Miriam Goldstein, SEAPLEX’s chief scientist, said that plastic had arrived in the ocean in such numbers in a "relatively short" period.

    Dec. 29, 2007: NBC's Kerry Sanders reports on a huge mass of garbage floating in the Pacific Ocean that is killing marine life and growing larger each day.

    "Plastic only became widespread in late '40s and early '50s, but now everyone uses it and over a 40-year range we've seen a dramatic increase in ocean plastic," she said. "Historically we have not been very good at stopping plastic from getting into the ocean so hopefully in the future we can do better." 

    Jim Leichter / Scripps Institution of Oceanogra

    Researchers found fish larvae growing on pieces of plastic, such as the one above.

    Sea skaters -- relatives of pond water skaters -- normally lay their eggs on flotsam such as seashells, seabird feathers, tar lumps and pumice. The sharp rise in plastic waste had led to an increase in egg densities in the gyre area, the study found.

    "We're seeing changes in this marine insect that can be directly attributed to the plastic," Goldstein said in a statement.

    She told BBC News that the addition of "hundreds of millions of hard surfaces" to the Pacific was "quite a profound change."

    Samples taken by the scientists showed how marine life, such as small velella pictured above, lives alongside pieces of plastic.

    "In the North Pacific, for example, there's no floating seaweed like there is in the Sargasso Sea in the North Atlantic. And we know that the animals, the plants and the microbes that live on hard surfaces are different to the ones that live floating around in the water," she added.

    A garbage patch has also been found in the Atlantic Ocean, lying a few hundreds miles off the North American coast from Cuba to Virginia.

    Oceanographer Curtis Ebbesmeyer, who said he coined the phrase the "Great Pacific Garbage Patch," told msnbc.com by phone that the only solution was to switch to using biodegradable plastic and let the plastic gradually disperse.

    "We can't clean it up. It's just too big. You'd have to have the entire U.S. Navy out there, round the clock, continuously towing little nets. And it's produced so fast, they wouldn't be able to keep up," he said.

    Ebbesmeyer said in 10,000 years scientists might find a layer of plastic in the ground and use this as evidence of "the plastic people."

    More world news from msnbc.com and NBC News:

    • Study: Plastic in 'Great Pacific Garbage Patch' increases 100-fold
    • US charity's gift to UK troops: $2 million for 'sanctuary'
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    Follow us on Twitter: @msnbc_world

    359 comments

    Maybe some mutation will come along and a plastic eating seaworm will evolve and proliferate. Then when this mutation peeks above the water and sees all the plastic on terra firma? Ooops, there goes all our high tech lifestyle. Or maybe I should have said, burp, there went all our high tech.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: environment, garbage, pacific-ocean, plastic, featured, trash, gyre, currents
  • 26
    Dec
    2011
    6:06pm, EST

    Green effort in Mexico City leaves trashy mess

    Reuters

    Rubbish is piled up in between parked cars in downtown Mexico City, Dec. 26. After city authorities shut down the Bordo Poniente landfill, one of the largest dumps in the world, garbage has started to accumulate and trucks have been slower to pick it up, according to local media.

    Mexico City’s largest landfill shut down on Monday, part of a planned shift to recycle more of the city’s garbage, but the green effort left piles of trash across the city. With locals complaining, garbage truck drivers counter that they’re unable to move as much trash as before since they’re having to drive farther to get rid of it.

    The new system requires drivers to haul their trash 3 to 4 hours away from downtown, whereas previously it only took an hour. “The trucks take a while to get there,” driver Joel Gara Murillo told the city’s Canal 11 TV station.

    On top of that, long lines have formed at the new transfer stations while the drivers and station workers get used to the new system.

    Read more about the landfill project.

    Marco Ugarte / AP

    A woman covers her face as she walks past piled up garbage that accumulated over the Christmas weekend in front of the Monument to Benito Juarez, one of Mexico's most important statesmen, in downtown Mexico City, Dec. 26. Garbage disposal workers complain that since last week's official closing of the Bordo Poniente city dump,one of the world's largest, they are backed up trying to get rid of the garbage.

    Reuters

    Rubbish is piled up next to the monument of Mexico's late President Benito Juarez in Mexico City, Dec. 26.

     

    155 comments

    But all the tree-huggers "feel better" that the landfill was closed down. It is not the results of the green push that matters it is how one "feels" about the effort.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: green, environment, mexico-city, world-news, trash

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