Two Words: Biodegradable Plastic

SYDNEY, Australia - In the 1960s film The Graduate, a meddling family friend takes aimless collegiate Ben aside to proffer unwanted career advice: “plastics.”

More than 30 years later, the planet is choking on the stuff - plastic packaging in particular. With green consciousness now taking root from Boston to Bangalore, the new hot career tip might be: “biodegradable plastics.”

The business involves using non petroleum-based commercial wrappings that look, feel and act like traditional plastic, but break down later into organic components.

One example is starch-based packaging, generally made from agricultural commodities such as corn or potatoes. These dissolve in prolonged contact with water and heat.

However, if you’re hoping you can toss your disposable plastics into the shower and watch them disappear any time soon, you’ll be disappointed. Most biodegradable packaging takes weeks, often months, to break down. Furthermore, eco-friendly packaging probably needs a few more years, and a few more breakthroughs, before it’s ready for prime time.

Nonetheless, early birds are staking out positions.

Earthshell of Santa Barbara, California, now provides biodegradable packaging to fast-food giant McDonald’s, as well as selling biodegradable picnic utensils. These are all made from a proprietary mixture of limestone and potato starch.

Others players - which include Minneapolis-based Cargill Dow LLC; Novamont SpA of Novara, Italy; and the German BASF Group - provide biodegradable packaging that is based largely on corn starch. These companies and others are being drawn to a global market now estimated at about $25 billion a year.

A key testing ground for biodegradable packaging was the 2000 Sydney Summer Olympics. Thanks to pre-Games pressure from environmental groups, food vendors for the Games used only biodegradable and recyclable packaging. More than three-quarters of the 660 tons of garbage generated each day at the Games was kept out of landfill, with much of it composted instead.

But that was the Olympics, the ultimate controlled environment. The challenge now is for biodegradable plastics to succeed in the chaotic real world, closing a roughly 2-to-1 price gap with traditional packaging.

The good news is that consumers and most businesses are keen on greenery. The bad news is they don’t want to pay anything more for it.

Without government mandates, this price differential is likely to hinder the spread of biodegradable packaging in the short-term.

“I figure it will be at least five years before fully biodegradable packaging becomes really widespread,” says Leo Hyde, research and development manager for DuPont Australia. “Without legislation to help it along, this packaging will just have to be price competitive.”

DuPont’s entry in the race is a water-soluble form of the more traditional recyclable material polyethylene terephthalate.

Meanwhile, Melbourne’s Plantic Technologies is commercializing a form of corn starch-based biodegradable plastic packaging, which it claims will break down into carbon dioxide and sugar in as little as an hour after contact with water, says David MacInnes, Plantic’s managing director and chief executive.

If the company can deliver, it really would pass the “shower” test. But it’s too soon to know, and the company has no firm contracts.

http://www.wired.com/science/discoveries/news/2002/04/5187

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5 Responses to “Two Words: Biodegradable Plastic”

  1. S
    11. March 2009 um 16:11

    S…

    Finally some good, no nonsense info about biodegradable. You can be positive I will bookmark To Drain, or Not To Drain : The Alternative Consumer to use your page as a reference and this, no later than Wednesday….

  2. AlexAxe
    24. March 2009 um 10:09

    Greatings,
    Thanks for article. Everytime like to read you.

    Thanks
    AlexAxe

  3. Noranit Wesayasatit
    6. November 2009 um 17:46

    Would you please explain more clearly about the mechanism of degradability?
    1.How bio-chemical reaction happen ?The moist of soil are concerned ?(in case of coloured Nylon-6)
    2.when they are land filled,what kind of microbial involved and where are they ?
    3.How long are Nylon-6 degraded ?
    Looking forward to your reply.
    Best regards

  4. Emily Williams
    20. July 2010 um 11:59

    we must concentrate more on eco-friendly materials and practices to help save the environment.*`~

  5. Jennifer
    30. July 2010 um 19:40

    Thankfully your product won’t breakdown on the shelf, giving the purchaser time to utilise his products.
    Experience has shown that some early products broke down whilst on the shelf causing huge loss and a backward step for the words biodegradable.
    Frustrtion with the so-called bio-degradable plastic bag from the super-markets and shops, I have noted that the NRMA is using Eco-pure on their disposable plastic wrapper … I say Congratulations NRMA for being a FORE-RUNNER…..that is spending their Members monies in a positive way for the Enviroment. Cheers!

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