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Ingenious 19-yr-old Develops Plan to Clean up Oceans n 5 yrs

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Ingenious 19-year-old Develops Plan to Clean up Oceans in 5 Years

FROM: http://www.trueactivist.com/ingenious-1 ... n-5-years/

September 13, 2013 | Filed under: Environment,News | Posted by: Amanda Froelich

Boyan Slats design.png
Boyan Slats design.png (77.87 KiB) Viewed 4550 times

Image Credit / boyanslat.com

By: Amanda Froelich,
True Activist.

With millions of tons of garbage dumped into the oceans annually and repeat incidence of oil spills like the Deepwater Horizon Disaster, it’s the Ocean which has taken the brunt of unsustainable methods from man. In effect, it’s estimated almost 100,000 marine animals are killed due to debris entanglement and continually rising pollution.

To a degree, individual lessening of consumerism and utilizing sustainable methods to re-use and eliminate waste is very beneficial. However, reducing the already-toxic state of the Earth is the biggest concern of environmentalists and engineers, seeking to utilize the technological advances already available. To this avail, it was 19-year-young Boyan Slat that ingeniously created the Ocean Array Plan, a project that could remove 7,250,000 tons of plastic from the world’s oceans in just five years.

Slat’s idea consists of an anchored network of floating booms and processing platforms that could be dispatched to garbage patches around the world. Working with the flow of nature, his solution to the problematic shifting of trash is to have the array span the radius of a garbage patch, acting as a giant funnel as the ocean moves through it. The angle of the booms would force plastic in the direction of the platforms, where it would be separated from smaller forms, such as plankton, and be filtered and stored for recycling. The issue of by-catches, killing life forms in the procedure of cleaning trash, can be virtually eliminated by using booms instead of nets and it will result in a larger areas covered. Because of trash’s density compared to larger sea animals, the use of booms will allow creatures to swim under the booms unaffected, reducing wildlife death substantially.

Economically, the Ocean Array Project also rises to the top due to its sustainable construct; it’s completely self-supportive, by receiving energy from the sun, currents, and waves. By also letting the platforms’ wings sway like an actual manta ray, contact with inlets in the roughest weather can be ensured. It’s a plan that merges environmental safety with thoroughly thought out processes.

Inspired to tackle global issues of sustainability, Boyan began by launching a project at school that analyzed the size and amount of plastic particles in the ocean’s garbage patches; his final paper went on to win several prizes, including Best Technical Design 2012 at the Delft University of Technology. Continuing the development of his concept during the summer of 2012, he
revealed it several months later at TEDxDelft2012.

Slat took his well-planned project further by then founding The Ocean Cleanup Foundation, a non-profit organization responsible for the development of proposed technologies. Aside from saving thousands of animals and reducing chemicals (like PCB and DDT) from building up in the food chain, it could also save millions of dollars a year due to clean-up costs, lost tourism, and damage to marine vessels. His undeterred passion to create healthier oceans has possibility to beneficially impact the lives of the entire world.

Although extensive feasibility studies are currently being conducted, it has been estimated that through the selling of plastic retrieved over the five years, the money would surpass the initial cost to execute the project. In other words, it may even be potentially profitable. Because the main deterrent to implement large scale cleanup projects is due to the financial cost, this solution could perhaps pave ways for future innovations of global cleanup to also be invented.

While the project process would take five years, it’s a span that could continue to increase the world’s awareness of garbage patches, as well as the importance of recycling and reducing consumption of plastic packaging.

To find out more about the project and to contribute, click here => http://www.boyanslat.com/

Check out the photos here => http://www.trueactivist.com/ingenious-1 ... n-5-years/

Read more http://www.trueactivist.com/ingenious-1 ... n-5-years/

• Daniel Orozco • San José, Costa Rica
Now, how can i help to make something like this happen, where do i donate, where do i sign for voluntary work?! Anything!
Reply • 75 • Like • Follow Post • September 14 at 8:43am

Alex Gastelum • Follow • Top Commenter • Instituto Tecnológico de Tijuana
please i'd like to participate too !!
Reply • 14 • Like • September 14 at 10:39am

Guilherme Fernandes • Top Commenter
Are you serious? There's a link in the last word of the text.
Reply • 119 • Like • September 14 at 11:20am

Diego Caraballo
Buena Dani
Reply • 3 • Like • September 14 at 2:57pm
View 8 more

Michael Brown Sr. • Berkeley High School
We now have in place a recycling fee for old tires and car battery's i have said before there should be a fee imposed on all plastic, oil, Styrofoam, paper, metals ,glass, etc. A small recycling fee imposed on these items would go a long way toward recovering them from the environment and could be used to pay people to recycle thus making trash a commodity.People would then have a financial incentive to recycle.Imagine every crackhead in America scouring the roadside for plastic glass etc the nation would be clean in no time!!!The drug addicts would even be contributing to society.I have to agree with peet grobler until it is profitable it wont work.But it is an excellent idea it just needs a financial incentive because idealism will only get you so far!!!
Reply • 35 • Like • Follow Post • September 14 at 8:02pm

Edna Utter • Top Commenter • Works at Onon County Social Services
People come around all the time looking for plastic, any bottles and metals. We take our bottles to a recycling station, always get 5 or 6 dollars.
Reply • 4 • Like • September 15 at 2:39am

Edna Utter • Top Commenter • Works at Onon County Social Services
I put broken appliances out on the curb days before garbage pick up. If they work (somewhat) I put a note on them. They are always gone in 1 or 2 days.
Reply • 5 • Like • September 15 at 2:48am

Jesse Calamo • Top Commenter • Bethpage, New York
Most states do, 5 cents a bottle. Around here most of the bottles will be out of your recycling before its even picked up.
Reply • 5 • Like • September 15 at 4:31am
View 9 more

Peet Grobler • Heidelberg, Gauteng
I hate being the pessimist every time . But, like all other world changing ideas out there , this will not happen unless there is profit to be made. Sucks to admit it. But that's the way things are. :'(
Reply • 16 • Like • Follow Post • September 14 at 10:00am

Patricia Foxall • Follow • Top Commenter
It looks like the idea could be profitable when the plastic returns and is recycled.
Reply • 18 • Like • September 14 at 11:12am

Joshua James Enriquez
Patricia Foxall touche
Reply • 7 • Like • September 14 at 3:29pm

Sarah Cohen • Top Commenter • Instructor at Aerial Fitness Orange County
At this rate, we might as well just sit back and wait for our self-made destruction to consume us.

I'm all for this idea, though. This is so brilliant!
Reply • 7 • Like • September 14 at 3:31pm
View 10 more

Khader Assad Shoman • Citigroup
LOVE THIS IDEA!!!!!
Reply • 16 • Like • Follow Post • September 14 at 8:18am

Pamela Duncan Vasquez
This is fantastic! Creative thinking at it's finest.
Reply • 3 • Like • September 15 at 11:30pm

Jarrett Byrnes • UCSB
Please see http://deepseanews.com/2013/03/the-ocea ... e-plastic/ and links therein as for why this idea, while noble, is likely to do more harm than good. The answer is rather to change our own behavior.
Reply • 9 • Like • Follow Post • September 16 at 5:32am

Anna Rosenwong • Brown
Is it really so hard for people to see what the oceanographers have to say?
Reply • 2 • Like • September 16 at 5:48am

Hilary Gerstein • Lecturer in Biology at University of Wisconsin - Whitewater
Anna, why do you hate progress? We won't let the facts stop us!
Reply • 2 • Like • September 16 at 1:12pm

Sean Williams
What an incredibly nonproductive article based solely on conjecture. Awesome.

Testing is required...the person who wrote that obviously didn't know anything about the concept or the project, no more than you or I. He just wanted to shoot down what is potentially a fantastic idea so he could sound intelligent to his peers from what I can gather.
Reply • Like • September 22 at 6:24am

H-s Smith • Follow • Top Commenter
does it have mercury & radioactive cleaning capacity?
Reply • 7 • Like • Follow Post • September 14 at 2:26pm

Kevin S. Jopp • Kenmore East Senior High School
what do we do with it once its out of the ocean?
Reply • 3 • Like • Follow Post • September 16 at 1:29pm

Richard Price • University of Life
Need sponsors like Coca-Cola, get them to use the re-cycled plastic in their bottles and use all this in their advertising.
Reply • 16 • Like • Follow Post • September 14 at 9:04pm

Bronwyn Hellings • Deakin University Warnambool
All major plastic manufacturers should pay for schemes like this as part of a global clean up. Regardless of the workings this should be made to work or at least a scheme like it if there are bugs.
Reply • 8 • Like • September 15 at 12:00pm

Rodrigo Gottin • UNIJUÍ
I thought along the lines of make them pay for the installation of said cleaning project or stop selling plastic bottles... simple as that.
Reply • 2 • Like • 20 hours ago

Claas Unbreakable Heppener • Follow
fantastic idea
Reply • 5 • Like • Follow Post • September 14 at 8:35am

Ita Fita
fantastic! should try to get funds in kickstarter.com or indigogo.com
Reply • 5 • Like • Follow Post • September 15 at 5:48pm

Joe Citizen • Top Commenter • 2nd only to God. at Nowhere. I do not care to enrich others more then myself on my labors.
When one looks at water currents, migration patterns and the food chain, one begins to realize that he needs to add Radiation to the list of toxic mix he should worry about cleaning or we will not have a non-irradiated fish for a few million years within the next decade (if even that long) thanx to the incompatence and greed of the NRC...

And one would think Japan would say "Screw You" to anything radioactive after the 2 A-bombs dropped... Guess they are not so smart afterall... (personally I say screw nukes for ANYTHING period!)
Reply • 2 • Like • Follow Post • Edited • September 15 at 3:45am

Derek Black • Follow • Sr. Customer Success Advisor at BigMachines
How many rads does it take to cause damage to a vertebrate fish?
Reply • Like • September 16 at 4:47pm

Jason Rasset • Follow • Top Commenter • Vp of Marketing at I love It Works
I would like to participate on funding this cause to make it happen. This method will truly benefit all of us, IF the Government wouldn't hinder this kind of project..
Reply • 2 • Like • Follow Post • Edited • September 15 at 11:40pm

Joseph Perrotta
Ya that's it spread it everywhere, a giant crap spreader! Brilliant idea! Forget about shredding it and putting it into a blast furnace that is designed for zero emission and using the heat from the blast furnace to run turbines to generate electricity. No thats bad for the economy! We need to dump it and forget about it. Let the next generation clean it up.Briliiant just briliant
Reply • 1 • Like • Follow Post • September 19 at 10:51pm

The NUPresentation Foundation
This is a great idea to support the Natural Environment. Our foundation is in the process of building our own ALLSolar Research Vessel (see YouTube) for the Pacific Ocean, and in Michigan we're building ALLSolar Great Lakes Skimmers.
Reply • 1 • Like • Follow Post • September 20 at 1:15pm

Rosemary Bacchus-Wu
In the Bible, it says that God created some animals to clean the sea. If man continues to eat those animals, the ones God has created to clean the sea and what we must not eat, then we could prevent a lot of problems etc. I believe that 'prevention is better than cure.' Not disrespecting any other's belief. If God is for us, who could be against us. God loves us, made us and knows what's best for us. The animals God created to clean the sea are those without fins and scales and those also, are what He says we should not eat. I pray that we would accept wisdom from God. I'm sure non of us made the world.
Reply • 1 • Like • Follow Post • September 15 at 10:58pm

Derek Black • Follow • Sr. Customer Success Advisor at BigMachines
Hey, the Bible is not the answer here. There are no animals that can eat all that plastic and live.
Reply • Like • September 16 at 4:44pm

Lucas Mingst • Follow • Top Commenter • Napa High
Interesting idea. Feasibility certainly has to be looked into. Collision avoidance measure would have to be initiated as these things would potentially be floating around shipping lanes. Still, I'd like to see something like this working out.
Reply • 1 • Like • Follow Post • September 16 at 5:06am

Stephen Frey • Follow • Top Commenter • East Robertson High School
If we all work together to help clean up our planet;whether it be our oceans or lands,we'd be leaving a better,cleaner,more pristine planet for our children and their children.Otherwise,we'd better hurry up and head to Mars.We're more able to do this than we may think.Takes effort and a willingness to work together;worldwide.
Reply • 1 • Like • Follow Post • September 14 at 8:53pm

Finola Mulholland
Can't agree with the 'head to Mars' idea. Humans have already trashed one planet... let's leave the rest of the universe alone.
Reply • 2 • Like • September 14 at 11:24pm

James Minze • Top Commenter • Houston, Texas
Maybe he should build just one first and see how it works in the real world...........
You know.....That prototype thing.....The thing that kills most wild ideas before they get into the millions of dollars at risk......LOL
Reply • 1 • Like • Follow Post • September 15 at 1:01am

Josh Joyce • Follow • Lindenhurst, Illinois
of course your nonexistant plan is MUCH better. you aren't even trying quit being such a downer. you aren't being forced to donate anything are you?
Reply • 6 • Like • September 15 at 3:43am

Larisa Draves • Ferris State University
Thanks for sharing this, Theresa Balogh Tripp. Please check this out Ryan Draves and Austin Draves.
Reply • 1 • Like • Follow Post • September 14 at 11:15am

Josie Chasseur
Lar, maybe Ryan Draves can help with a project like this! He's just that smart!
Reply • Like • September 14 at 12:12pm

Supermagna Rider
Unlike this article suggest it may still take some time to do some exact studies. See link. http://www.boyanslat.com/in-depth/
Reply • 1 • Like • Follow Post • September 24 at 8:34pm

Cliff Kafka
What if that thing hits rough seas? Is there a way to ensure it isn't destroyed due to high winds. Rough seas etc?
Reply • 1 • Like • Follow Post • September 23 at 4:54am

Dani Burkhardt • Huntington Beach, California
Love this!! Amazing..
Reply • 1 • Like • Follow Post • September 16 at 5:38pm

Donna Schultz • Top Commenter
Have thought of something similar in the past. Glad someone did it.
Reply • 1 • Like • Follow Post • September 14 at 11:57am

Jaclyn Durrie L
we need to create different types of plastics as well, this is a great idea, but theres enough evidence to show that we can now create plastic that won't harm the environment. All our products should break down and not become harmful toxic elements. Our system is only based off profit, so we aren't even using what mankind as developed. We can make fuel out of water, we have the ability to live in a non toxic world. Profit only works based in greed. Greed is our down side, but we may have to turn profit into ideas like this, so at least we have some sort of planet before the greedy powers to be destroy whats left of this amazing earth!
Reply • Like • Follow Post • September 15 at 3:49am

Christopher Ryan Israel • Follow • Top Commenter • UNLV
Dont find the cure , find the CAUSE the JEWS John 8:44
King James Version (KJV)
44 Ye are of your father the devil, and the lusts of your father ye will do. He was a murderer from the beginning, and abode not in the truth, because there is no truth in him. When he speaketh a lie, he speaketh of his own: for he is a liar, and the father of it.
Reply • Like • Follow Post • September 15 at 1:50am

Lee Schelin • Top Commenter
What are you trying to say? I didn't realize that plastic containers were mentioned in the Bible. Try and stay on topic Christopher.
Reply • Like • September 15 at 5:39am

Christopher Ryan Israel • Follow • Top Commenter • UNLV
the Jews ARE THE CAUSE
Reply • Like • September 16 at 5:08pm

Jeff Snyder • Works at Olympia School District
Another point of view. http://inhabitat.com/the-fallacy-of-cle ... nup-array/
Reply • Like • Follow Post • September 15 at 3:35am

Caroline Sarian • Top Commenter
Until a cruise ship crashes into it, or pirates steal it. This kid is amazing, and I hope this materializes!!
Reply • Like • Follow Post • September 14 at 10:55am

Josh Libby • Top Commenter • South Paris, Maine
Hopefully this kid won't end up dead.
Reply • Like • Follow Post • September 15 at 3:36am

Kelly Martin • Boone, North Carolina
what is a boom.
Reply • Like • Follow Post • September 15 at 10:22am

Ayla Smith • Follow • Top Commenter • Writer and Published Poet, Amateur Model and Photographer at Drakenette
I am guessing pretty similar to a logging boom, here is the definition. 'Log boom, a barrier placed in a river, designed to collect and/or contain floating logs timbered from nearby forests.'
Reply • Like • September 21 at 1:11am

Dimitris Tsarouxakis • Kos, Dhodhekanisos, Greece
i have a better idea...dont throw plastic at see...simple!
Reply • 1 • Like • Follow Post • September 15 at 1:56am

Ayla Smith • Follow • Top Commenter • Writer and Published Poet, Amateur Model and Photographer at Drakenette
Most of the trash you see floating actually comes from sewers that dump into rivers and oceans. A lot of the "plastic island" that floats in between Japan and the States, comes from LA and other parts of California and up and down that coastline from Canada all the way into Mexico. Also balloons don't help. Nor do ships.
Reply • Like • September 21 at 1:04am

Luke May • Application Developer at Bit Systems Ltd.
http://inhabitat.com/the-fallacy-of-cle ... nup-array/
Reply • Like • Follow Post • September 22 at 4:46am

Franklin Gray • Top Commenter • Bocas del Toro, Panama
I don't think this kid really knows what the ocean is like. That thing would not last one year out there, due to weather and pirates. To give you an idea, a multi-million dollar sailing vessel with experienced captains have denigrated in a matter of seconds at sea and they are built for some heavy weather. The way most sailors don't end up fish food is by avoiding bad weather. This can't avoid bad weather. History has also proven that anything at sea unprotected will be stolen.

Nice idea though.
Reply • Like • Follow Post • September 23 at 4:55am

Ray Hamel • Top Commenter • Works at Small Business Owner
Nice idea, add it to this one and we have hope.....just have to convince the fossil fuel gazillionaires and their paid politicians to give up their power....http://www.trueactivist.com/sweden-runs-out-of-garbage/
Reply • Like • Follow Post • September 22 at 11:39pm

Sherri-lee Salo • Marca College
How about TALKING to the folks in the SHARK tank / Network * Cash * Innovation * Profits ???
Reply • Like • Follow Post • 8 hours ago

Christian Alonso
and when that machine meets the Pacific garbage patch the machine is going to die
Reply • Like • Follow Post • September 21 at 8:15am

Patricia Ruggles • West Babylon Senior High School
Could this be adjusted to help with oil spills??? Keep up the good work, and I thank you on behalf of my children and their children
Reply • Like • Follow Post • September 17 at 11:54pm

Sue Kohn
This is brilliant.
Reply • Like • Follow Post • September 23 at 12:55am

Brian Raña • Top Commenter • Works at CDPHP
Ok, so...what exactly is a boom? I thought it was a loud noise
Reply • Like • Follow Post • September 15 at 11:57am

Ayla Smith • Follow • Top Commenter • Writer and Published Poet, Amateur Model and Photographer at Drakenette
I am guessing pretty similar to a logging boom, here is the definition. 'Log boom, a barrier placed in a river, designed to collect and/or contain floating logs timbered from nearby forests.'
Reply • Like • September 21 at 1:10am

Jack Byers • Follow • Caseworker at PA Dept of Welfare
Better start with the Pacific ocean toot sweet.
Reply • Like • Follow Post • September 15 at 8:59am

DOMUS R
But this is a unfounded structure! There are marine bacteria that digest plastic. This is where the search should be based, not on a complex structure, high cost, whose goals are unclear. Scatter it through all the oceans? It is more easier and ingenious to find a physical-chemical biological way than a Gadgety like this.
Reply • Like • Follow Post • September 22 at 2:37pm

Nancy Stowell • Follow • Top Commenter • University of Pennsylvania
I think it's a great idea and hope to see it in action.

As for the comments: why is there no "Dislike" button??
Reply • Like • Follow Post • 17 hours ago

Aqilah El • Follow • Top Commenter • Volunteer at Volunteer at the Humane Society
This is absolutely amazing, hope has been restored in my generation. We're not all rude and uneducated :) aha
Reply • Like • Follow Post • September 20 at 9:00am

Tyson Schuetze • Minneapolis, Minnesota
There is a disclaimer on his website stating that they have yet to complete a feasibility study regarding this system. This system is merely hypothetical at the current time. A lot of work will need to be done for this to even become something that can be considered.
Reply • Like • Follow Post • September 17 at 6:52am

Richard Harris
Never work, nice idea, but it can't. Meanwhile the amount of junk that washes up on remote beaches every year gets worse. I liked the video, the part about the very large underwater props...yup..they kill sea life too, plus leave residue behind, oil, fuel, waste from the ships, its all there, so whats worse? Giving money to this guy? Ummm, no, I think not!!!! This is a hoax......do the math, think it out....don't be fooled by a pretty pic of some blue eyed eyed guy....
Reply • Like • Follow Post • September 15 at 12:11pm

Jesse Logsdon • University of South Carolina
He is pretty though... ; )
Reply • Like • September 15 at 12:54pm

Lobotomy Room • Curator at The World's Largest Roughrider Memorabilia Collection
Several hydraulic, oceanographic, and mechanical Phd engineers have reviewed the application and determined the technology warrants a trial. However I do believe your math reference is valid as this is not a profit based undertaking.
Reply • Like • September 16 at 5:38am

Dawn Gifford • Top Commenter • University of Maryland, College Park
It's a great concept, but I fear folks are underestimating how powerful and volatile the sea is. Random storms, 25 foot waves and more are pretty common. And the trash is absolutely everywhere, even days and days away from land, not just in the gyres. We have to try of course, but we have yet to conquer to ocean.
Reply • Like • Follow Post • September 16 at 1:19pm

Peter Hetzel • Shibuya, Tokyo
send the bill to plastic bag manufacturers and the stores that use them. Simple.
Reply • Like • Follow Post • September 16 at 12:58pm

Wayne Flora • Fort Lauderdale, Florida
What about this being a hazard to navigation and how can this be resolved? If too low of a profile it will not show up on radar.
Reply • Like • Follow Post • September 15 at 4:35pm

Douglas A Wade • Top Commenter • University of California, Irvine
How does it hold up in 50' waves, and hurricane force winds?
Reply • Like • Follow Post • September 17 at 2:26am

Shaena Razorwire • Follow • Montreal, Quebec
CROWDSOURCE FUNDING
Reply • Like • Follow Post • September 17 at 12:14am

Renée-Claude Morin • Polyvalente Montignac
Blessed this man!!!
Reply • Like • September 17 at 12:43am

Vlad Dracul • Top Commenter • Works at World Wide Open Seas & Oceans
?!?!?!?!?!?!
Reply • Like • Follow Post • September 15 at 10:43pm

Erika Belair • Follow • Works at At making jewelry
Please check out the link on the last line...they are looking for qualified helpers with the feasability study...and it is possible to contribute to that study by paypal...
Reply • Like • Follow Post • September 15 at 7:19pm

Michael Brignac
Wheres the sign up sheet? I want to do my part to make my home better. Not just for me, but for my kids, and one day theirs too.
Reply • Like • Follow Post • September 15 at 1:13pm

154 Responses to Ingenious 19-year-old Develops Plan to Clean up Oceans in 5 Years
← Older Comments
1. David Samuel Coleman September 16, 2013 - 9:50 am
Having sailed into an island of garbage the size of 2 footy fields and deliberately dumped by ships even the Aust navy. Tax the shipping industry implement the system .Harvest the plastic and the millions of mussels growing underneath and make a profit.
Reply
2. Martin Smith September 16, 2013 - 10:54 am
This is a very poorly written article. Couldn’t you find a native English speaker?
Reply
3. Nemo September 16, 2013 - 6:25 pm
This is a bullcrap idea. A giant funnel??? Is that the best this “ingenious” kid can do?
Reply
o Tony Snark (@SnarkAnthony) September 25, 2013 - 1:16 pm
So what’s your idea, genius?
4. naturelover September 16, 2013 - 6:31 pm
Nemo….what idea do you have in mind? O! nothing I see. Complainers are useless!
Reply
5. Kurt Kline September 16, 2013 - 11:35 pm
An Interesting idea but it is the micro-particulate plastics that are likely the most difficult problem to resolve. This boom system may pick up the larger materials but will not alter the smaller ones. Ideas and testing level projects are relatively easy to demonstrate usefulness. The reality of scaling up, marine navigation issues and other factors will make this problematical. ,
Reply
o john September 17, 2013 - 7:18 pm
we have to start somewhere and all those tiny pieces started as large pieces……. something to think about
o Mii September 21, 2013 - 5:54 pm
Micro particulate plastics are problem but how are these big plastic items not relevant when they are dissolving in water as well?
6. marvelangga September 21, 2013 - 11:56 pm
Though it sounds too good to be true, I express my full support to this project, as a fellow environmentalist. I wish you success on this grand endeavor, Boyan Slat!
Reply
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