Global Alert – An App for Ocean Recovery

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Are you passionate about ocean recovery and fighting pollution? The Ocean Recovery Alliance has a Global Alert App that lets you instantly report and upload trash hotspots in or near your waters. There’s no better day to get the app than today: World Oceans Day.

If the technological age has brought us one thing, itโ€™s convenience. Think about it โ€“ instant correspondence, Internet banking, a quick Google search, online shoppingโ€ฆ the list goes on. Could you even imagine writing a thesis by hand, or living your life without Wi-Fi access?

Without todayโ€™s technology, you wouldnโ€™t even have stumbled across this article. In fact, this article wouldnโ€™t exist at all – firstly, because it has been published on a website, and secondly, because the topic of this article is an App โ€“ a prime technological creation.

Tech for Environmental Change

Since the convenience of technology is indisputable, we should be thinking bigger than using it solely for our own personal advantage.

Itโ€™s been a while since the first phone applications came out, and weโ€™ve come a long way since Snake (the best game to play on your old-school brick Nokia) and other game entertainment for long bus rides. These days, phone applications go way beyond the categories of games and the like. They can actually make a big difference in important causes, such as education and environmental change.

Given the fact that todayโ€™s tech generation pretty much live glued to their phones, tablets, and computer screens, anย App is a perfect medium to use to create awareness and involvement with important projects.

The perfect example is theย Global Alert App, proudly launched by Ocean Recovery Alliance, a California and Hong Kong-based NPO.

The Floating Trash Crisis

Have you ever walked past a river riddled with plastic bottles, grocery bags, and other countless objects that donโ€™t belong there? Have you ever gone for a seaside stroll and marvelled at the majestic wonders of nature only to stumble across a heap of rubbish left behind after a lagoon picnic? Those of you who are familiar with this will know that itโ€™s a very disturbing sight.

This so-called floating trash is a massive issue because so much of it gets washed into rivers and oceans. According to the Ocean Recovery Alliance, about 8 million tons of plastic enter the ocean every year. EIGHT MILLION. That is roughly the same as having 5 garbage bags of trash for every foot of coastline around the world โ€“ all 217,000 miles of it!

To give you an idea of what weโ€™re dealing with, just take a look at this footage taken by the Ocean Recovery Alliance.

Saying that there is a drastic urgency to reverse the damage we have been causing with ocean waste is an understatement. The recovery of our ocean and marine life is an absolute priority for the sustainability and well-being of this planet and all living beings.

Global Alert โ€“ A Technological Solution

The team at Ocean Recovery Alliance thought about how technology could assist their cause by getting as many people involved as possible.

The team explains how the Appโ€™s creators approached the problem.

โ€œFloating trash has no geographic or political boundaries, so solutions must involve scalable international collaboration, yet be local in scope and reach.โ€

How to Use the Global Alert

All it takes for you to get involved in this project is a few easy steps. If you stumble across a water area that is full of litter and pollution, hereโ€™s what you can do:

Download the free Global Alert App

Report and Upload the Trash Site โ€“ ‘See โ€“ Share โ€“ Solve’

Select the โ€˜Add Trash Siteโ€™ option in the app and follow the prompts then click โ€˜Submitโ€™ or โ€˜Upload Laterโ€™ (for example, if you want to get to a Wifi hotspot before uploading).

You donโ€™t need to fill out all the fields. Hereโ€™s what the team notes.

โ€œThe minimum we want to know is who you are, what kind of trash you saw, where it was, and roughly how much. Anything else you can add, which would help people find the location and understand what you saw, would be helpful. But donโ€™t just say โ€˜on the coral or on the reefโ€™ as that doesnโ€™t help us locate things too well in a big city.โ€

In other words โ€“ be specific. For example, donโ€™t say โ€œon Camps Bay beachโ€ but rather, โ€œnext to the tidal pool on Camps Bay beach, close to Pick โ€˜n Pay.โ€

Make sure you zoom in as much as possible and put the โ€œPinโ€ right on the location where you see the waste. It is also veryย important to take at least one photo so that stakeholders in that community can see the size and location of the trash.

Pat Yourself on the Back

Once you submit the trash site, the information gets sent to the nearest Community Steward who then takes further action to have the litter removed.

This is how โ€œSee โ€“ Share โ€“ Solveโ€ works โ€“ your images, and sharing of information, greatly help others to better manage the environment to clean up and help create preventative measures for the future.

Once the site has been cleaned, you can upload new images of the โ€˜Cleanup Site.โ€™

Yay. You just helped get rid of an entire floating trash site and clean up a spot on our planet. All with a few simple clicks.

Check out the Frequently Asked Questionsย you have any doubts, and take a look at the Privacy Policyย for T&Cs.

For any more specific questions about the App, feel free to contact Info@GlobalAlert.org

FundiConnect 2Cents

The 8th of June marksย World Oceans Day. Now is the time toย get involved in bringing awareness to ocean recovery and sustainability. If you’re not involved yet, using this App is a good way to start!

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