13 C
Cape Town
Sunday, April 19, 2026

CAPE TO RIO CREW COMMITS TO GOING GREEN

Published on

One of the world’s most popular transatlantic sailing contests kicked off in Cape Town on the weekend – and this year, the competition is about more than just finishing first.

The 16th edition of the Cape2Rio will see vessels cross 3600 miles of treacherous oceans to see who reaches Rio de Janeiro first.

Crews will be on board their yachts for more than 20 days, which brings with it the challenge of responsibly disposing of any waste and refuse.

Magdaleen Kroon is a crew member on board NORTHERN LIGHT – she says she did a lot of research to make sure they don’t harm the environment while they sail towards Rio.

“We’re not throwing anything overboard, and it can be quite a mass of waste that you generate on-board with six people for a month..and we don’t want to dump it on the Brazilian shores either, so we decided to take nothing at all! It was a massive challenge, I had to do a lot of research..and there are a number of companies selling things like produce without any packaging.”

To follow the race and see who is on the leader board, click HERE

Liesl Smit
Liesl Smit
Liesl is the Smile 90.4FM News Manager. She has been at Smile since 2016, with nearly 20 years experience in the radio industry, including reading news, field reporting and producing. In 2008 she won the Vodacom Journalist of the Year Award, Western Cape region. liesl@smile904.fm

Latest articles

LOOK: City teams responding to localised flooding in numerous areas

 Heavy rain and strong winds lashed Cape Town on Sunday, 19 April, as the second of two cold fronts made landfall this weekend. The...

Eskom workers get 7% wage hike

 Eskom has concluded a three‑year wage agreement following a Central Bargaining Forum process, which will see employees get a 7% annual salary increase. In a...

Diesel price could hit R40 per litre in looming fuel hike

 South Africans should brace for another steep fuel price increase in May. According to mid-month data from the Central Energy Fund, the under-recovery on petrol...
error: Content is protected !!