
Nebraska company helps fight plastic pollution in oceans
Clip: 12/27/2025 | 3m 51sVideo has Closed Captions
How a company in landlocked Nebraska is helping fight plastic pollution in oceans
A new report from the Pew Charitable Trusts and its partners predicts that plastic pollution will more than double over the next 15 years — the equivalent of dumping nearly a garbage truck full of plastic waste every second. Hundreds of miles from any ocean, an innovative U.S. company wants to turn plastic pollution into something constructive. Kassidy Arena of PBS Nebraska reports.
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Nebraska company helps fight plastic pollution in oceans
Clip: 12/27/2025 | 3m 51sVideo has Closed Captions
A new report from the Pew Charitable Trusts and its partners predicts that plastic pollution will more than double over the next 15 years — the equivalent of dumping nearly a garbage truck full of plastic waste every second. Hundreds of miles from any ocean, an innovative U.S. company wants to turn plastic pollution into something constructive. Kassidy Arena of PBS Nebraska reports.
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Learn Moreabout PBS online sponsorshipEarlier this month, a report from the pew charitable trusts and its partners predicted that plastic pollution will more than double over the next 15 years.
That's the equivalent of dumping nearly a garbage truck full of plastic waste every second.
In the middle of America, hundreds of miles from an ocean, Kassidy arena of pbs Nebraska, visited an innovative company that wants to turn plastic pollution into something constructive.
Kassidy: When people walk into this crowded warehouse in Nebraska, they see bags of what look like garbage piled floor to ceiling, but the seat this isn't trash.
It is a company's treasure.
>>First, what makes our recycling unique is we have hard to recycle plastics.
We recycle them in-house.
They don't sit.
We make plastic lumber or pallets with them.
Kassidy: They have long been a leader in Nebraska, and they are now trying out a new type of recycling, taking plastics cold promotions around the world and turning them into building materials.
He says his company is one of the few in the U.S.
That processes trash that is too hard to recycle.
Plastic silverware, grocery bags.
4000 miles across the pacific, word of his innovative business reached the university in Honolulu.
It specializes in cleaning the ocean from plastic, including discarded fishing gear.
They collect nearly 200 tons of it every year and it is not just from the waters off Hawaii but all corners of the globe, including a debris field known as the great pacific garbage patch roughly located between Hawaii and California, the largest a cumulation of floating ocean plastic in the world.
>> The plastic pollution problem in the ocean is impacting every single ocean.
Kassidy: Jennifer lynch is a codirector of the company and says it will take many more efforts like this one in Nebraska to turn this plastic crisis around.
>> Plastic pollution has traveled the entire globe, and every single human on the planet is experiencing exposure to micro-plastics.
Kassidy: That exposure comes after more than 50 years of nationwide recycling efforts, which has failed to keep peace with the surge of plastic.
Patrick acknowledges the business he is building.
The lumber itself needs to prove it can meet real-world construction standards, but the biggest challenge is the stability.
Do they justify the cost and carbon footprint of shipping from Hawaii?
He believes the answers to one day bring the solution closer to the problem.
>> We are hoping that if we can show it is successful, we can start a similar plant there in Hawaii, where they can process it all on the side.
Kassidy: His dream is that the synthetic boards he is making 10 help rebuild maui, which was nearly destroyed two years ago and devastating wildfires.
>> It is about the quality.
Even though recycling and sustainability is a good story, if the product is not superior in quality or price, then people will not want to use it for whatever projects.
Kassidy: His quest for now is to prove his lumber is up to the task and that the great plains can play a role in cleaning up the world's oceans.
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