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Friday, April 20, 2007

Greener Shopping Bags?

Consumers may find that the virtues of biodegradable plastics are really a mixed bag.

By Peter Fairley

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Disappearing act: Novamont’s plant in Terni, Italy, turns out a polymer used in plastic bags. The polymer is a biodegradable blend of petroleum-based polyester and plant starch.
Credit: Novamont

The San Francisco Board of Supervisors' vote last month to institute the first ban on polyethylene shopping bags in the United States may reduce the volume of plastic in landfills, but, despite many advocates' hopes, it is unlikely to dramatically reduce dependence on imported oil. That's because most biodegradable plastic bags (which San Francisco officials hope will take polyethylene's place) rely on a petroleum-based form of polyester.

San Francisco's ban will, however, create an important new market for biodegradable plastics that could bring plastics based on renewable feedstocks into the market. The best hope may be Metabolix, based in Cambridge, MA, which last year completed a $95 million initial public offering and signed a joint venture with agribusiness giant Archer Daniels Midland (ADM) to develop its corn sugar-based biodegradable polymer.

Standard polyethylene bags have multiplied (San Franciscans alone use 181 million a year) because they are cheap and easy to use. They also produce less pollution in their manufacture than paper bags do. Until recently, biodegradable plastic bags have cost at least three times more and fallen short on performance, but the picture has changed over the past decade. "Today you've got some products that work from a functionality standpoint--the price gap has come way down," says Keith Edwards, biopolymers business manager in North America for German plastics and chemicals giant BASF.

Most biodegradable plastic bags are produced by blending plant starch with petroleum-based polyesters, which improves the bag's strength and processibility with conventional film equipment. Leading producers are BASF and Italian polymers firm Novamont. Edwards estimates that biodegradable bags from these polymers could cost three to four cents more than the one-to-two-cents-per-bag cost of polyethylene. But he's betting that San Francisco consumers will demand them thanks to San Francisco's curbside organic-waste recycling program.

San Francisco's environmental officials are making the same bet. Currently, the program collects about 300 tons of food per day, contributing to a 67 percent recycling rate for its municipal waste overall. But that number must rise significantly if the city is to meet a self-imposed goal to recycle 75 percent of its waste by 2010.

BASF recently boosted capacity for its biodegradable resin from 8,000 metric tons to 14,000 metric tons per year. Overall, the company expects annual production of biodegradable and bio-based polymers to triple or quadruple by 2010 from an estimated 50,000 tons produced worldwide in 2005. Meanwhile, Novamont plans to scale up a process for producing its biodegradable form of polyester from vegetable oils; it could begin within the next two years.

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Comments

  • greener shopping bags?
    djs on 04/20/2007 at 5:25 AM
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    In Europe, you bring your own, canvas, shopping bag(s) to the supermarket. Such bags serve you for many years. Saves a low of plastic garbage.

    Incidentally, in a European supermarket you also put your shopping into those bags all by yourself at check-out. No mock contessas staring down their noses at lowly shopping bag assistants.
    Rate this comment: 12345
    • Re: greener shopping bags?
      micheltaine on 04/20/2007 at 10:20 AM
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      Firstly, I am French and familiar with what happens in French supermarkets;
      Secondly, the shopping bags in question are usually furnished free by the supermarket, are made of woven polyethylene, and are supposed to last about 6 months;
      Thirdly, I don't think "Contessas" (and Counts) are looking down on part-time teen-age helpers in US supermarkets; I have lived in the US and never saw this happen; it would probably be thanks to a certain percentage of stupid individuals present in every society.
      Fourthly, we europeans would love to have such helpers, but overly strict labor laws forbid it.
      Rate this comment: 12345
      • Re: greener shopping bags?
        sbadrinarayanan on 04/20/2007 at 11:05 AM
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        3
        I am an indian.I have been to US (Bedford,TX) and i have also been in Stockholm Sweden.

        As indicated i have not seen any count or royal waiting to be served by adoloscent assistants of the stores.

        Again,as told by the other person , In none of the Stockholm stores, bags are given free.

        Actually, They do give a very lean bag.Whereas there are also some good bags (usually charged at 1.50:- kept near to checkout)

        It is true that most of the shoppers in Stockholm come with their own bags.Its a  nice concept where the store makes the buyer pay where the environmental degradation that may cause due to the plastic bags. This will make the buyers bring their own bag thereby reducing their dependency in using more and repeated newr plastic bags.

        I like that concept.Maybe here in india we should also force this on our buyers in order to leave a great tomorrow for our children.

        thanks.
        Rate this comment: 12345
    • Re: greener shopping bags?
      gabrielg01 on 04/20/2007 at 2:38 PM
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      @djs: Don't criticize if you are not fully aware of the facts.

      Many US food markets offer reusable shopping bags.
      Here is an example: http://www.stopandshop.com/services/

      Many stores have been offering self-checkout lanes for more than a year now; nobody helps you - you have to pay and bag your purchases yourself. These have become very popular, especially with the younger people.
      Rate this comment: 12345
  • Disaster of a Good Idea
    nick47g on 04/27/2007 at 10:57 AM
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    Before these things degrade, they'll still be an ecological disaster and will let people justify going back to the bad old habit of just pitching their trash.

    In the months before degradation occurs, there will still be ugly litter and dead sea creatures.

    Bio degradation has its place, but only as adjunct to sustainability and recycling, to which  degradable products do have a place.
    Rate this comment: 12345
  • I don't get it? ?
    karcar on 04/27/2007 at 2:28 PM
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    1
    The PHA will degrade if it drifts in oceans or wetland, fine,  but what does it degrade to? What is left behind? Nutrients for the ecosystem?
    PET will degrade also, over time, lots and lots of time. How much quicker does the PHA decompose?
    Rate this comment: 12345
  • [no subject]
    Jesse @ Premier Packaging on 09/26/2008 at 4:04 PM
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    1
    Karcar,

    I can't say for sure how long it takes PHA to break down, or what final elements it ends up as.

    As for the oxo-biodegradable bags carried by my company I can be more specific. Upon making contact with soil the bags biodegrade into water, carbon dioxide and biomass, all part of the natural bio-cycle.

    Under ideal conditions it takes the bags 5 years to completely disintegrate and be fed back to the environment. If they're not exposed to heat, UV light, wind or water it could take additional time.

    That's a far cry from the 200 to 400 years it takes for standard plastic bags to degrade.
    Rate this comment: 12345
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