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Materials & Assembly

Biofase Makes Bioplastic From Avocado Pits

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Ann R. Thryft
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Re: still recyclable?
Ann R. Thryft   1/22/2013 11:52:08 AM
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All good questions, Clint. None of the Biofase-specific answers are immediately available on Biofase's website. I looked for such information--after using Google Translate, but this effort is quite new: the company was started early last year. I hope they publish a paper on the subject soon. Regarding compostability and recycling: most participants in the bioplastic industry say that recycling is the first "best use", and compostability comes second. Making a bioplastic compostable is usually aimed at food-service or other single-use items--as Biofase is doing--since the idea there is at least if the items are thrown in the trash (as they often are, as Elizabeth's comment points out), it's better to be compostable and/or be biodegradable in a landfill. We covered this here:
http://www.designnews.com/author.

CLMcDade
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Iron
still recyclable?
CLMcDade   1/21/2013 3:18:30 PM
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Hi Ann,

Great article as usual.  As always with these introductory articles, they open the door to a lot of questions.  Mike and I were wondering the following:

When does the degradation kick in?  After exposure to what?  Into what components does it break down? 

All of these lead to our most important question, from a manufacturer of plastic components point of view - what is the impact of a biodegradable additive that is combined with PP or PE? 

-  Does it eliminate the possibility of recycling PP and PE materials into like product. 

- Will it prevent recycled plastics from having properties comparable to plastics without the additive? 

- Does the partially degraded bioplastic remain in recycled PP and PE or does the additive (and any components it has broken down into) burn off during recompounding or remelting? 

While a 100% compostable product makes a lot of sense, a partially decomposing one might not if it prevents or negatively impacts the recyclability of the PE or PP.

Elizabeth M
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Blogger
Re: Innovative Process
Elizabeth M   1/21/2013 5:16:31 AM
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I agree, Greg--good to see not just a great idea for using a natural resource to create a biodegradeable plastic but also showing the financial benefit to doing so, which often is how naysayers dismiss such initiatives. I love this idea, of course, especially as someone who consciously limits my use of single-use plastic because I know the truth about it--it can only be recycled once and ultimately ends up in landfills or in the ocean. And again, it's taking a country outside of the U.S. to lead the way on an environmental business move. Will definitely be keeping an eye on how this and similar ideas pan out.

TJ McDermott
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Blogger
That's a lot of guacamole
TJ McDermott   1/20/2013 3:14:20 PM
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30,000 metric tons a month, of just avocado pits.  One source on the web says an average avocado seed weighs 7.584 ounces (.215 kg, or .000215 metric tons).

30000 metric tons * (1 seed / .000215 metric tons) = 

139,534,884 avocados per month, 

1,674,418,605 per year. We've reached a Carl Sagan moment.

 

Please pass the tortilla chips?

TJ McDermott
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Blogger
Unique process for each material?
TJ McDermott   1/20/2013 3:01:17 PM
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Ann, your article leads me to believe each material requires its own unique process to become a plastic.  Avocado pits need one, corn needs a different one.

Is this true?  Is the grail of the bioplastic industry a universal process?

Greg M. Jung
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Platinum
Innovative Process
Greg M. Jung   1/18/2013 11:26:47 PM
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Great job for turning a cost outlay into a profit.  I applaud the innovative initiative to take a previous waste product and turn it into a productive product and a new revenue stream (not to mention reducing waste to the environment).

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