The new water-resistant Ultra II’s have a little less oil, because some of it’s been replaced by the massive clouds of algae that have been poisoning a Chinese lake.

After a massive explosion of algae growth in China’s Lake Taihu a decade ago left more than two million people in the area temporarily without safe drinking water, the government started spending hundreds of millions of dollars a year to try to solve the algae problem. One part of the solution: working with a company that harvests algae from the lake before it grows out of control, and turns it into a flexible, rubbery material that is now being made into shoes.

 

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Vivobarefoot’s water-resistant Ultra III shoes are usually made from a petroleum-based version of the same material, ethylene-vinyl acetate (EVA). But a version that will launch in July is made from a blend of algae and EVA, instead. To get enough algae to make one pair means cleaning 57 gallons of water, which are then returned to the lake.

 

The first product made from the material was a foam traction pad for a surfboard; the shoes will be the second product to come to market. A company called Bloom supplies the material to Vivobarefoot, producing it using mobile platforms that gently suck algae from the water, returning water that is filtered and clean. The harvested algae is mixed with the raw petroleum material that is typically used to make EVA, helping reduce the carbon footprint of the shoes and cleaning the water of the lake. The current material uses 40% algae and 60% EVA, though Bloom is working on materials that use more algae.

The algae explosions (called blooms, hence the company name) that make this possible are caused by pollution–particularly fertilizer runoff from agriculture–in the water, that can make algae grow uncontrollably, which can cut off oxygen and sunlight for marine animals. Some species of algae also release toxins as they die, that cause even more damage to the ecosystem.

While some governments try to reshape the systems that pollute the water (China, for example, closed several factories near Lake Taihu), Bloom is attempting to treat the problem more quickly.

Read the source article at fastcompany.com