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After Failing to Qualify for Rio, Sailor Cleans Trash for Others

A USA based sailor cleaned the trash at a Guanabara bay in Rio ahead of the Olympics Games.

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Bobbing on Rio de Janeiro’s Guanabara Bay in a blue and white fishing boat, American sailor Brad Funk uses a plastic bin to scoop rubbish from the waters where Olympic sailing races will take place next month.

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Dream Dumped, Dedication Didn’t

A USA based sailor cleaned the trash at a  Guanabara bay in Rio ahead of the Olympics Games.
Brad Funk contributes to Rio Olympics even after failing to compete. (Photo: Reuters)

Funk missed out on his dream of competing in Rio 2016 in the two-man 49er sailing class, but travelled to Brazil anyway with the aim of clearing the path for those who did, including his girlfriend British windsurfer Bryony Shaw.

I decided that if I am not going to compete, I want the sailors to not have problems when they sail. I love Rio, and it is very important to me that the Olympic Games is a success and that the trash does not get stuck on the sailboats, taking medals away from them.
Brad Funk, Sailor, USA
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Trash A Concern For Authorities

In recent months, concern flared over pollution levels in the bay and nearby sea, where sailing, windsurfing and long-distance swimming events are being held.

The State Environmental Agency (INEA), which is conducting daily monitoring of water quality with the help of the World Health Organisation (WHO), insists the water quality is fine, helped by the rapid movement of water through the mouth of the bay where events will be held.

More worrying for many competitors, however, is the floating debris which could crash against boats and slow them down in the competition.

A USA based sailor cleaned the trash at a  Guanabara bay in Rio ahead of the Olympics Games.
Trash in water bay ahead of Rio. (Photo: Reuters)

INEA has deployed 12 green eco-boats, each with a wire metal scoop on the front that lifts rubbish out of the water and into its hull. It has also placed 17 red floating eco-barriers across the mouth of rivers and canals feeding the bay, which collect debris floating on the water’s surface.

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Just the eco-barrier in the Canal do Cunha collected 208 tonnes of rubbish in the last month, INEA said.

On the airplane over to Rio, Funk met Camila Avelar who decided to volunteer to help his effort, hoping to inspire a chain reaction.

“A lot of people say that the two of us trying to clear the rubbish from the sea will not make any difference,” Avelar said.

“But I don’t think that is the point, it is the attitude and encouraging other people to do the same thing.”

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Topics:  Sports   Rio Olympics 2016   Sailors 

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