Corn Plastic to the Rescue
Wal-Mart and others are going green with "biodegradable" packaging made from corn. But is this really the answer to America's throwaway culture?
- By Elizabeth Royte
- Photographs by Brian Smale
- Smithsonian magazine, August 2006, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 4)
Wal-Mart, which has begun using PLA containers in some stores, has also switched packaging on high-end electronics from PET to a sandwich of cardboard and PLA. “It has a smaller packaging footprint, it’s completely biodegradable and it costs less,” says Kistler. What Wal-Mart says about PLA’s biodegradable nature is true, but there’s an important catch.
Corn plastic has been around for 20 years, but the polymer was too expensive for broad commercial applications until 1989, when Patrick Gruber, then a Cargill chemist looking for new ways to use corn, invented a way to make the polymer more efficiently. Working with his wife, also a chemist, he created his first prototype PLA products on his kitchen stove. In the beginning, it cost $200 to make a pound of PLA; now it’s less than $1.
The polymer has had to get over some cultural hurdles. In the mid-1980s, another bio-based plastic appeared on grocery store shelves: bags made from polyethylene and cornstarch that were said to be biodegradable. “People thought they would disappear quickly,” recalls Steven Mojo, executive director of the Biodegradable Products Institute. They didn’t. Will Brinton, president of Woods End, a compost research laboratory in Mt. Vernon, Maine, says the bags broke into small fragments of polyethylene, fragments that weren’t good for compost—or public relations. “It was a big step backward for the biodegradability movement,” he adds. “Whole communities abandoned the concept of biodegradable bags as a fraud.”
According to a biodegradability standard that Mojo helped develop, PLA is said to decompose into carbon dioxide and water in a “controlled composting environment” in fewer than 90 days. What’s a controlled composting environment? Not your backyard bin, pit or tumbling barrel. It’s a large facility where compost—essentially, plant scraps being digested by microbes into fertilizer—reaches 140 degrees for ten consecutive days. So, yes, as PLA advocates say, corn plastic is “biodegradable.” But in reality very few consumers have access to the sort of composting facilities that can make that happen. NatureWorks has identified 113 such facilities nationwide—some handle industrial food-processing waste or yard trimmings, others are college or prison operations—but only about a quarter of them accept residential foodscraps collected by municipalities.
Moreover, PLA by the truckload may potentially pose a problem for some large-scale composters. Chris Choate, a composting expert at Norcal Waste Systems, headquartered in San Francisco, says large amounts of PLA can interfere with conventional composting because the polymer reverts into lactic acid, making the compost wetter and more acidic. “Microbes will consume the lactic acid, but they demand a lot of oxygen, and we’re having trouble providing enough,” he says. “Right now, PLA isn’t a problem,” because there’s so little of it, Choate says. (NatureWorks disputes that idea, saying that PLA has no such effect on composting processes.) In any event, Norcal says a future PLA boom won’t be a problem because the company hopes to convert its composters to so-called anaerobic digesters, which break down organic material in the absence of oxygen and capture the resulting methane for fuel.
Wild Oats accepts used PLA containers in half of its 80 stores. “We mix the PLA with produce and scraps from our juice bars and deliver it to an industrial composting facility,” says the company’s Tuitele. But at the Wild Oats stores that don’t take back PLA, customers are on their own, and they can’t be blamed if they feel deceived by PLA containers stamped “compostable.” Brinton, who has done extensive testing of PLA, says such containers are “unchanged” after six months in a home composting operation. For that reason, he considers the Wild Oats stamp, and their in-store signage touting PLA’s compostability, to be false advertising.
Wal-Mart’s Kistler says the company isn’t about to take back used PLA for composting. “We’re not in the business of collecting garbage,” he says. “How do we get states and municipalities to set up composting systems? That is the million-dollar question. It’s not our role to tell government what to do. There is money to be made in the recycling business. As we develop packaging that can be recycled and composted, the industry will be developed.”
For their part, recycling facilities have problems with PLA too. They worry that consumers will simply dump PLA in with their PET. To plastic processors, PLA in tiny amounts is merely a nuisance. But in large amounts it can be an expensive hassle. In the recycling business, soda bottles, milk jugs and the like are collected and baled by materials recovery facilities, or MRFs (pronounced “murfs”). The MRFs sell the material to processors, which break down the plastic into pellets or flakes, which are, in turn, made into new products, such as carpeting, fiberfill, or containers for detergent or motor oil. Because PLA and PET mix about as well as oil and water, recyclers consider PLA a contaminant. They have to pay to sort it out and pay again to dispose of it.
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Comments (84)
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I love corn plastic! It is such a better alternative to oil plastic!
Posted by Jack Harries on March 20,2013 | 12:39 PM
While Wal-Mart and all of these big companies are using PLA, what they are not understanding is that PLA depletes the Ozone more than synthetic plastic such as LDPE and PP. It is a marketing ploy for companies to claim an environmental benefit when in fact PLA is just the opposite an environmental burden and is killing the environment. For more information on the real LCA cycle of PLA visit the University of Pittsburgh.
Posted by Jack Roberts on March 11,2013 | 10:02 PM
Dose this PLA is being used in other parts of the world,other than USA
Posted by SUMIT MITTAL on December 28,2012 | 10:07 PM
I have a small business and have recently switched to PLA containers. They do seem better than regular plastic deli containers (#4,5) that aren't really recycleable (or so I've heard.)
Posted by Julie Roberts on December 21,2012 | 01:31 PM
hi i like the article
Posted by jone smith on November 8,2012 | 09:07 AM
Heaven help those of us allergic to corn and corn derivatives. As if we don't have enough to worry about already....
Posted by dl on August 27,2012 | 01:18 PM
i agree 100000000000000000%%%%%% on all these comments my dudes
Posted by swagg on May 22,2012 | 02:30 PM
If composting could be standardized across the country or globally by for instance stamping a compost number such as 1 thru 6 or so onto any product container that can be recycled. It would make composting simple for consumers and reduce the cost at recycling centers. Even small children could put their numbered container into a numbered recycle bin.
Posted by john morehead on April 19,2012 | 10:52 AM
Microsoft has done some amazing things with compost. All of their plates, cups, containers, and utensils are compostable. There are compost bins in every kitchenette and cafeteria. I'm not sure who the supplier is for our new utensils, but their melting point is just below the temperature for boiling water - our last type would melt in hot foods. I'm not sure how this affects their compostability, though.
Posted by Ryan Smith on March 7,2012 | 01:28 PM
PLAs are biodegradable, not compostable.
Things that are compostable have to break down naturally within, if I remember correctly, 90 days.
PLAs decompose in a time between 10 to 1000 years, depending on the conditions.
Also,
PLAs should not be recycled, as they are kept separate from other plastics as they are plant based, and therefore have to be composted.
Posted by Andy on March 1,2012 | 11:09 PM
I just ordered some deli containers made from corn. But on the bottom there is the recycle sign with the # 7 in it. I know that is the worst plastic to use. I am confused. Does anyone have any information that can help me?
Posted by BECKY MCGOWEN on February 13,2012 | 02:32 PM
Bully ! Good show!
Posted by sam on December 10,2011 | 07:25 PM
I think we should save trees
Posted by destiny a.taylor on November 21,2011 | 01:33 PM
Why do the PLA containers need to be disposed of or recycled? If they are so durable, can they be washed and reused? Wild Oats customers surely would be willing to wash and reuse for their next purchase of organic strawberries.
Posted by Kateriiina on November 11,2011 | 09:26 AM
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