Design Summary & Reader Response (Analysis) Draft 3
In the article “A Little Robot That Cleans the Beach, One Butt at a Time” (2021) written by Monica Gonderman, states that an Artificial Intelligence (AI) beach buggy robot named BeachBot in short for BB, has a very distinct goal, which is to clean up cigarette butts after the smokers discard it on the beach. Gonderman claims that the BeachBot “measuring about 2.5 feet wide”, helps to pick “some of the 4.5 trillion cigarette butts”, “10 cigarette butts in 30 minutes”, discarded on the beach with ‘its two gripper arms’ and storing them into its storage section and unload manually later.
Gonderman states that toxic chemicals and microplastics are
dangerous to sea creatures, especially when the "chemical" leak from
the cigarette butt filter. Therefore, to attempt to save the situation,
BeachBot creators Edwin Bos and Martijn Lukaart, co-founders of TechTics, “put
the project into motion”. Gonderman also mentions that the BeachBot recognizes
the cigarette butts by various images of it only on the sand. The BeachBot is
also assisted by other small robots which will update BeachBot on the
whereabouts of the cigarette butts.
BeachBot rovers will be beneficial towards the environment
by picking up toxic cigarette butts around the beach, provide extra manpower
and keep beaches cleaned from unsightly cigarette butts poking out from the
sand.
Firstly, cigarette butts are the single most littered item
in the world with over at least 4.5 trillion every year. The cigarette butts
are small, easy for the aquatic life to eat by accident. Cigarette butts take
up to 10 years to degrade as they contain hundreds of toxic chemicals that
remain in the environment longer than the cigarette butt itself. The chemicals
inside the cigarette include arsenic, lead and nicotine which heavily impacts
the natural environment around us. Furthermore, according to a research report
by San Diego State University (2011) found that chemicals spewing from
cigarette butts are deadly to all aquatic fish species.
Secondly, BeachBot can be on duty cleaning up the beaches
whenever there is a shortage of manpower. People may not be available to aid in
cleaning up the beaches or even not bother to help at all. BeachBot however
will follow its commands to clean up the beach whenever there is power in its
battery tank or given the order to do so. Even though BeachBot is currently
picking up around “10 cigarette butts in 30 minutes” which does not seem like a
major impact on the environment at first, BeachBot will continue to get
improvements and upgrades.
Thirdly, cigarette butts poking out on the beach is an
unsightly view. Nobody likes to see litter on the beach that reminds us how
unclean the ocean is now a days, even giving off a negative impression that
repels visitors from coming to the cigarette butt filled beaches. According to
Reader's Digest (2021), Lela Nargi wrote an article showing the scenery of
various beautiful beaches before pollution got the hold of them, enforcing the
importance of keeping the beaches clean.
However, the efforts of BeachBot to clean up the beaches is
negligible as the damage has already been done. The amount of litter and
cigarette butts accumulating over the past 20 years are already way beyond the
point of recovery. According to one of the articles of National Geographic by
Laura Parker, in 2015 there is an estimated 150 million metric tons of plastic
in the sea, with the possibility of having the amount of trash being nearly
tripled to 600 million metrics in 2040. With this much-predicted amount of
plastic trash, not compared to the number 1 most littered trash to be cigarette
butts, how will the BeachBot impact the undeniable future?
In conclusion, BeachBot is still a work in progress with
lots of space for improvement. It will take some time for BeachBot to fully be
capable to pick up more cigarette butts than its prototype version and when it
does, there will be another great helper to aid in maintaining the coastal
ecosystem from cigarette butts.
Gonderman, M.(2021, July 23). A Little Robot That Cleans the
Beach, One Butt at a Time. MotorTrend. https://www.motortrend.com/news/beachbot-ai-robot-techtics-cleans-cigarette-butts-beach/
Slaughter, E. Gersberg, R. M. Watanabe, K. Rudolph, R.
Stransky, C. Novotny, T. E.(2011, November 1). Toxicity of cigarette butts, and
their chemical components, to marine and freshwater fish. Tobacco Control https://tobaccocontrol.bmj.com/content/20/Suppl_1/i25#block-system-main
Nargi, L.(2021, July 23).What the World’s Most Polluted
Beaches Used to Look Like. Reader's Digest. https://www.rd.com/list/worlds-most-polluted-beaches/
Parker, L.(2020, July 24).Plastic trash flowing into the
seas will nearly triple by 2040 without drastic action. National Geographic. https://www.nationalgeographic.com/science/article/plastic-trash-in-seas-will-nearly-triple-by-2040-if-nothing-done
Comments
Post a Comment