Alternative materials and practice Unlike synthetic fishing nets,
biodegradable fishing nets decompose naturally under water after a certain period of time. Coconut fibre (
coir) fishing nets are commercially made and are hence a practical solution that can be taken by fishermen.
Collection and recycling in 2014 weighed 11.5 tons Legalizing gear retrievals and establishing waste management systems is required to manage and mitigate abandoned, lost, and discarded fishing gear at-sea. Between 2008 and 2015, the US Fishing for Energy initiative collected 2.8 million pounds of fishing gear, and in partnership with
Reworld turned this into enough electricity to power 182 homes for one year by incineration. One retrieval initiative in Southwest Nova Scotia in Canada conducted 60 retrieval trips, searched ~1523 square kilometers of the seafloor and removed 7064 kg of abandoned, lost, and discarded fishing gear (ALDFG) (comprising 66% lobster traps and 22% dragger cable). Lost traps continued to capture target and non-target species. A total of 15 different species were released from retrieved ALDFG, including 239 lobsters (67% were market-sized) and seven groundfish (including five species-at-risk). The commercial losses from ALDFG in Southwest Nova Scotia were estimated at $175,000 CAD annually. In 2009 world-renowned Dutch technical diver Pascal van Erp started to recover abandoned ghost fishing gear entangled on North Sea wrecks. He soon inspired others. Organised teams of volunteer technical divers recovered tons of ghost fishing gear off the Netherlands coastline. The loop was then closed - after a season's diving 22 tons of fishing gear was sent to the Aquafil Group for recycling back into new Nylon 6 material. In 2012 Pascal van Erp formally founded the not-for-profit Ghost Fishing organisation. In 2020 the Ghost Fishing Foundation rebranded as the Ghost Diving Foundation. A plan to protect UK seas from ghost fishing was backed by the
European Parliament Fisheries Committee in 2018. Mr. Flack, who led the committee, said: "Abandoned fishing nets are polluting our seas, wasting fishing stocks and indiscriminately killing whales, sea lions or even dolphins. The tragedy of ghost fishing must end". Net amnesty schemes such as Fishing for Litter create incentives for the collection and responsible disposal of end of life fishing gear. These schemes address the root cause for many net abandonments, which is the financial cost of their disposal. Fishing nets are often made from extremely high quality plastics to ensure suitable strength, which makes them desirable for recycling. Initiatives like Healthy Seas are connecting environmental cleanup projects to manufacturers to re-use these materials. Recycled waste nets can be made into yarn and consumer products, such as swimwear. In Australia, the Carpentaria Ghost Nets Program has collaborated with indigenous communities to increase awareness of ghost nets and to foster long term solutions. The program has trained indigenous northern Australians in scouting for ghost nets and in removing ghost nets and other plastic pollution.
Proposed solutions Technology systems for marking and tracking fishing gear, including GPS tracking, are being trialled to promote greater accountability and transparency. Finding ghost nets drifting at the ocean surface is a needle-in-a-haystack problem and is resource-intensive. In 2024, a net-harvesting
buoy was proposed as a solution for neutralizing such fish nets (see diagram). This passive system finds ghost nets due to the difference in speed between the buoy and the drifting fish nets. The buoy catches them with its arms by entanglement, wrapping the fish nets around it. Rotation is wind-driven using a
Savonius wind turbine or cup-type
vertical-axis rotor installed on the buoy. Once the net is caught, the buoy is tagged for collection. Many buoys are needed for such a decentralized solution to collect fishnets. However, ocean cleaning can be done at different locations simultaneously instead of at one centralized location. The concept is currently under evaluation. ==See also==