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Eden takes Eco Board to California to help surfing world go green

Posted at 11:43am on 14th Nov, 2006

The Eden-inspired Eco Board has been taken to California to spur the surfing world towards a greener future. Eden’s Sustainability Director Chris Hines presented the board at the commissioning of UK-based surfboard blank manufacturer Homeblown’s new factory in San Diego.

The Eco Board started life after a giant balsa tree fell to earth in Eden’s Humid Tropics Biome.

Russell Winter on the Eco BoardYou can see the colour from the hemp fibres in the board. Just don't try to smoke it.(from the Culture gallery)

Chris Hines and colleague Pat Hudson worked with Cornwall-based companies to make a “blank” – a surfboard core - from the timber and more environmentally-friendly materials than those used in conventional board production.

The result is a collaboration between Eden and Homeblown and two other companies, Sustainable Composites and Hillzee Surboards, all of which are based in Cornwall.

The latest prototype is made of a 40 per cent plant-based blank, laminated in hemp cloth and a bio-resin.  Eden hopes that the new greener technology will win over the Californian surfing industry recently shaken by the closure of Clark Foam.

This giant company manufactured 65 per cent of the world’s surfboard blanks but went out of business following stringent new environmental regulations.

Eco board from the Eden projectForm left to right: Chris Hines, Tris Cokes and Mark Massarra.(from the Board Art gallery)

Chris Hines said: “Showing a prototype surfboard to the Californians may seem like taking coals to Newcastle but we believe that the new version of the Eco Board represents a hugely-exciting leap forward for the industry and sport.”

“For manufacturers and surfers to be won over by them, Eco Boards must be as good if not better in terms of performance, and cost competitive. Ultimately we believe all surfboards will be made from sustainable materials sourced from the indigenous plant base.”

Chris Hines, who founded the pressure group Surfers Against Sewage and was recently awarded the Surfer’s Path Green Wave Award, presented the latest prototype to a senior member of the US surfing community.

Chris added: “The Eco Board project is a natural fit with Eden’s core values of plants, people and sustainable futures.”

Homeblown Managing Director Tris Cokes:

I've been making boards for 40 years and in that time surfing has become a huge global industry with global environmental and social impacts.

When Clark Foam announced their shut down in December last year, we immediately saw the opportunity and this opening is a great landmark. We are pleased that the chemistry and processes used in Homeblown production comply with the US Environmental Protection Agency’s tough regulations. Our unique delivery system also means highly efficient use of materials and energy and reduced waste streams.

The San Diego factory will be Homeblown’s third, following their Redruth, Cornwall outlet and one in Jeffrey’s Bay, South Africa.

We believe it is vitally important to reduce “surfboard miles” by manufacturing close to the market.

By following this policy we reduce the carbon footprint and global warming impact of the sport. It is a form of madness to transport surfboard blanks half way round the world. Big volume and low weight being transported long distances equals a big negative environmental footprint.

The Eco Board is the real future. This is one in a series of prototypes but we are moving rapidly and hope to progress the foam and get to market in the near future.

We will continue working with Eden and our other partners in pursuit of the ultimate goal, a 100 per cent natural surfboard that can be used by everyone.

The party from Cornwall, UK are protecting the planet by offsetting the carbon generated by their flights through climatecare.org.

www.edenproject.com

eiji04

EcoBoard, the way to go!

Hi, with Clark Foam gone a board like this is certainly needed, if you take into account the makeup of a standard board! It's most definatly a work in progress... but one hell of a board! ;o) ...Eden will be posting updates on SurfCore... till then all comments welcome! Cheers :o) SteveB(eiji04), Eden Project

eiji04

Improved Strength?

This was another step along the prototypes. It featured a Homeblown
standard MDI blank, laminated in hemp and bio resin. We could probably
have had two coats of cloth which would have made it stiffer and still
been in the right weight bracket. What we were all trying to do is to
prove that eco doesn't have to be heavy and hairshirt.

We are clear that for the eco boards to become the norm then they must
be as good if not better in terms of performance, durability and be cost
competitive. The one issue where people might have to compromise is
colour, they may not be able to be perfectly white. IN fact where ever
you see perfect white there is a pretty good chance that there are
chemical brightners being used. That's cosmetic and any surfer who has
to have cosmetic appearance over performance and environment ...

The Phantom

Hemp

Interesting story. So do you need a special licence to grow hemp for the board or are there just some kinds of 'da erb' that are controlled?

eiji04

hemp growing

Licenses are issued from the Home Office for approved hemp varieties and end-uses since distinction between the male and female plants is very difficult. :O)

The Phantom

Aha

How does it work - are one of the hemp sexes good for getting you high and the other good for surfing on? Sounds like an all-round wonder-drug to me!

Do you think prohibition laws and having to get special licences to grow the crop will get in the way of eco boards in future?

eiji04

Hemp!

Not being an expert I can't give you much detail.. http://www.motherhemp.com/ is a good place for info. As for laws getting in the way of the manufacturing of the boards, this really ishouldn't be a problem if the benefits and future are considered :O)

CN

Eden more hypocrisy

It's a great pity that Chris Hines:

1.Has attached himself to a theme park that puts more fossil fuelled gawpers on the roads of Cornwall than any other.

2.That his recycling efforts are focused on rubbish generated for no good reason.

3.That any environmental benefits of the 'organic' surfboard are being undone many times over by the ARMS TRADE TRUSTEES of the 'eden' 'project' theme park:


http://uk.youtube.com/watch?v=U8XiwboC5To

Beware Bullsmit.

eiji04

Oh dear, it's a shame you

Oh dear, it's a shame you have to be like that.. very un-keeping of surf culture! Suggest you find something more rewarding in life.

CN

Honesty used to be an inbuilt feature of surf culture.

1. Wooden surfboards have been in existence for centuries.
http://www.google.co.uk/search?hl=en&q=wooden+surfboards+history+&btnG=Search&meta=

The song and dance around this one is disproportionate.

Then again, a lot of the guff and hot air coming out of the greenhouses in question is disproportionate (and misleading).

2.This balsa tree didn't 'fall down'.
It was cut down.
'The idea for the board came when we had to fell a balsa tree in the Humid Tropics Biome at Eden.' - Chris Hines here:
http://www.bbc.co.uk/cornwall/content/articles/2005/08/08/eco_surfboard_feature.shtml

Did it get too big for its cramped suburban and alien surroundings?

Was it heading off in search of a real balsa tree community?

Was it just trying to escape from the 'biggest jungle in captivity'?

Beware Bullsmit - it can be infectious.

Some Truth:

http://www.nowpublic.com/environment/contaminated-seed-eden-project

   
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