Skip to main content
Netherlands News in English

Main navigation

  • Top stories
  • Health
  • Crime
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Tech
  • Culture
  • Sports
  • Weird
  • 1-1-2
Image
Aerial drone image of Terschelling and the Wadden sea on a summer day
Aerial drone image of Terschelling and the Wadden sea on a summer day. - Credit: Thomas Roel / Depositphotos - License: All Rights Reserved
Business
Tech
Nature
Science
Wadden Sea
Future of the Wadden Sea
Wadden Sea Association
Wadden Sea.
Joint Wadden Sea Secretariat
ban on plastic
deposit on small plastic bottles
plastic in the ocean
Thursday, 13 February 2025 - 06:30

Share this article:

Friesland tracks plastic waste flow to the Wadden Sea

Friesland is launching a project to track how plastic waste from the province ends up in the Wadden Sea. Over the next three years, the movement of plastic debris in surface waters will be monitored using GPS-equipped drifters. The first five orange buoys were launched Friday in the Leeuwarden Prinsentuin park, marking the beginning of their journey. Similar drifters will be deployed later in Sneek and Dokkum.

The trackers, roughly the size of a soda bottle, will be monitored as they drift in the water. Cameras will be placed under bridges to capture and document floating waste, while artificial intelligence will be used to analyze the data. Fine-mesh nets will be installed in multiple locations to filter microplastics from the water, according to Friesland officials.

The drifters are subject to currents and wind, and their movements will be tracked remotely. “Once they approach the Wadden Sea, we’ll have enough data,” said a spokesperson from Noria Sustainable, the Delft-based company leading the project. By the end of the three-year study, there will be enough information to implement specialized capture systems at identified "hotspots" to remove plastic waste from the water.

Previous studies by the Wadden Academy have shown that around three-quarters of the plastic waste in the Wadden Sea originates from the Netherlands. Friesland aims to determine how much of that plastic comes from the province's inland waters. “Plastic waste is a growing environmental issue, particularly in ecosystems in inland waters and at sea. Plastic does not decompose but breaks down into smaller particles, which can harm both animal and human health,” said Friesland province officials.

The project, which has a total cost of more than 1.2 million euros, is being funded with support from the Wadden Fund, which contributes nearly half of the total. Additional funding is reportedly provided by the province, Wetterskip Fryslân, and the municipalities of Leeuwarden and Súdwest-Fryslân.

More like this

Image
Sunset over the North Sea from Ameland, Friesland. June 2020
Ameland and Terschelling may regain nighttime watertaxi service under proposed trial
Image
Aerial drone image of Terschelling and the Wadden sea on a summer day
Around 750 people protest gas drilling under Wadden sea in Holwerd
Image
A woman is getting a wet wipe.
Netherlands pushes for EU-wide ban on wet wipes containing plastic
Image
A dolphin swims near a beach
Video: Second dolphin washes ashore in Frisian village of Wierum in days
Make NL Times your top Google source

Follow us:

Latest stories

  • Dutch gov't to give mayors more options to intervene in protests-turned-riots sooner
  • Pregnant woman thrown to ground at Zeist asylum shelter was trying to ask cop a question
  • Senior Dutch virologist, colleague accused of smuggling inactive Mpox into United States
  • Majority in Dutch Senate supports ban on gay conversion therapy
  • Turkey extradites brother of wanted drug trafficker Bolle Jos to Netherlands

Top stories

  • Pregnant woman thrown to ground at Zeist asylum shelter was trying to ask cop a question
  • Senior Dutch virologist, colleague accused of smuggling inactive Mpox into United States
  • More Dutch businesses trying to combat staff shortages with AI over wage hikes
  • Football coach jailed for secretly filming over 500 boys in changing rooms
  • U.S. Embassy: Dutch World Cup fans can face long passport lines, social media checks

© 2012-2026, NL Times, All rights reserved.

Footer menu

  • Change Privacy Settings
  • Privacy Policy
  • Contact
  • Partner Content