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Bali’s Beach Cleaning Robot Comes To Popular Tourist Beach In Canggu

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Bali may be one of the most popular tourist destinations in the world and one of the most beautiful, too, but scratch beneath the surface, and holidaymakers quickly see that the island needs some drastic changes.

Many people in Bali hope that tourism can be a force for good, especially when big tourism businesses invest in solutions that will help both local communities and improve visitor travel experiences. 

Microplastics on Hand.jpg

Bali’s issues with waste management and ocean waste are well documented. As more people live on the island, both locals and tourists, more waste is produced.

Aside from waste produced on the island, the whole globe is grappling with the impacts of ocean plastic, and Bali is the recipient of tides upon tides of plastic waste every year, and this is before we consider the impacts of microplastics in the water. 

Canggu is Bali’s busiest tourism resort right now. Once a very traditional Balinese village, the area has transformed from a relaxed haven for surfers and long-term travellers to a busy and booming international tourism resort. Canggu is also home to Bali’s leading beach clubs, including Finns Beach Club, which has just taken its commitment to supporting the environment one step further. 

Finns Beach Club has teamed up with Seariel Cleaners to bring the BeBot Smart Beach Cleaning Robot to Canggu. The ESG Manager FINNS Bali, Abdul Manaf, told reporters that the new BeBot will be deployed daily for two and a half hours, depending on the weather, to help remove everything from cigarette butts to plastic shards, bottle caps, and inorganic debris from the sand. The BeBot filters sand down to a depth of 10cm, does not produce emissions, and is silent. 

Manaf told reporters “We use this tool to clean the beach area in front of the FINNS property and also to the area around Pura Perancak.” He added “We hope this can be an inspiration for other tourism industry players in maintaining environmental cleanliness, especially in coastal areas.”

Manaf noted that the efforts of the private sector, especially the tourism sector, to work with local communities is the key to maintaining the preservation of Bali in the midst of increasing pressure due to tourism activities and marine plastic waste.’

Finns Beach Club’s BeBot is not the first of its kind to be deployed in Bali. Back in November 2024 the Hyatt Regency Bali and Andaz Bali, invested in a BeBot for the beachfront at Sanur.

Searial Cleaners, the company who has created the BeBot describes the equipment as “a smart autonomous robot that collects trash (cigarette butts, wrappers, bottle caps, cardboard and more) buried in a given area. Not only is it silent, it’s also solar-powered, making it an eco-friendly solution.”

Sanur Beach Palm Trees and Sun Loungers

The deployment of another BeBot in Bali comes just weeks after Bali’s Governor Wayan Koster announced that all tourism businesses on the island must devise their own waste management systems and stop sending waste to landfills.

Suwung-Landfill-Trash-Bali

Governor Koster even announced that businesses that fail to find solutions to manage their waste could have their permits and licenses revoked.

He noted that tourism businesses, such as hotels, restaurants, beach clubs, and entertainment venues, that implement an internally managed waste sorting system will be acknowledged with certifications and green awards. 

View of Finns Beach Club and Berawa Beach in Canggu Bali

With this in mind, over the next few months and certainly into the next decade, tourists in Bali will be called to support more eco-friendly practices while on vacation. This will include things like minimising waste, not using plastic water bottles, and sorting trash into the correct bins for appropriate recycling, composting, or disposal. 

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Rusty212

Friday 16th of May 2025

I lived in the street where Finn's is now from 2001, there was a top villa there on that land called Gajah Putih.Nobody ever went to that beach...l was so happy to leave that area and move to Singaraja .

Firechef

Friday 16th of May 2025

All well and good, now train the Locals to clean up after themselves and you just might succeed in getting Bali clean.

Simone

Friday 16th of May 2025

People in Bali including expats don’t pick up their dog shit. It’s all over the beaches, just kick a bit of sand over the top and no one will see until you step in it. Reason I stopped going to the beach years ago. Point being, hope the cleaning robot detects dogs shit before trying to pick it up if someone decides to put their cigarette butt in it or a plastic straw?!!!!!! 🙈

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