- There are many advantages of biodegradable plastics, and plastic pollution can be prevented with these products
- As technology advances, there are new processes and materials being created to make plastic more environmentally friendly
- Plastic pollution has become a big problem around the globe, one that threatens humans, wildlife, and the earth
The advantages of biodegradable plastics can prevent plastic pollution from becoming worse, and other methods can be used to help clean up any of this pollution that is already present. Waste to energy programs, and other alternative uses for traditional plastics that are cluttering up landfills and other areas, can eliminate the plastic garbage buildup that harms the earth and environment. The oceans have millions of plastic bottles, wraps, and other packaging floating. The problem of plastic pollution has become so bad that recently a large jet went down in the ocean and rescuers thought that wreckage from the jet was located. On closer inspection, it was determined that the piles of debris were not from an airplane, but were actually part of the garbage that collects in the area from around the world. The currents and tides had brought the items to the area, where the trash was left to float. One of the advantages of biodegradable plastics is that moisture or heat degraded plastics would break down faster, so that the items could not travel as far or collect in large amounts. These products may have some disadvantages, but with advances in technology these can be minimized or eliminated completely.
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6 Responses to “Biodegradable Plastics: Technology that Saves Our Planet from Plastic Pollution”
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August 21st, 2010 at 9:29 pmYour data is incorrect. First of all, PLA uses more petroleum in its development than plastic.(see “How Green are Green Plastics”)They off-set this by buying energy credits. PLA will take 400-500 years to break down in a landfill, just like a normal plastic.PLA will also not break down in a backyard compost. The only place it will break down are in commercial and municipal composts that accept PLA.(see ASTM 6400 which is the standard PLA meets) There are 87 such locations in the US.So the chances of it ending up there are slim.They need high amounts of heat, aeration, and moisture than found in a backyard compost.According to the EPA 2007 table of “Characteristics of Municipal Waste by Weight” plastic takes up 12% of a landfill. Paper and fiberboard takes up 32.7%.PLA and corn based ethanol are responsible for the shortage of food around the world and its increased prices. Nitrogen runoff from corn fertilizers has created a dead zone the size of the state of New Jersey in the Gulf of Mexico, where nothing can live.PLA is not a good choice. There are biodegradable additives that can be put into plastics that enable them to biodegrade in landfills in 1-10 yrs. They then create methane which is now being harvested at 75% of all US landfills for energy to make electricity. PLA is the worst choice for biobased products. Look for others crops that can be made into containers and are backyard compostable.
September 23rd, 2009 at 11:34 pm