Zürcher Nachrichten - Are bioplastics really the wonder alternative to petro plastics?

EUR -
AED 3.973379
AFN 72.895147
ALL 98.366008
AMD 417.753709
ANG 1.945655
AOA 986.036662
ARS 1068.514566
AUD 1.650375
AWG 1.947188
AZN 1.834097
BAM 1.955115
BBD 2.179757
BDT 129.004824
BGN 1.955902
BHD 0.407657
BIF 3137.730221
BMD 1.081771
BND 1.430912
BOB 7.459388
BRL 6.232624
BSD 1.079532
BTN 90.746222
BWP 14.491193
BYN 3.532963
BYR 21202.715136
BZD 2.176058
CAD 1.505663
CDF 3147.954225
CHF 0.938496
CLF 0.036952
CLP 1019.622369
CNY 7.717787
CNH 7.701448
COP 4718.696707
CRC 554.203365
CUC 1.081771
CUP 28.666936
CVE 110.2264
CZK 25.353448
DJF 192.244456
DKK 7.460457
DOP 65.018133
DZD 144.280824
EGP 52.693057
ERN 16.226568
ETB 129.004017
FJD 2.467087
FKP 0.827738
GBP 0.831844
GEL 2.953406
GGP 0.827738
GHS 17.542857
GIP 0.827738
GMD 75.197369
GNF 9310.825563
GTQ 8.345078
GYD 225.860907
HKD 8.405979
HNL 27.232715
HRK 7.452354
HTG 142.271494
HUF 405.49973
IDR 17015.07072
ILS 4.027099
IMP 0.827738
INR 90.943908
IQD 1414.217836
IRR 45547.975558
ISK 148.506141
JEP 0.827738
JMD 170.789403
JOD 0.766868
JPY 165.880412
KES 139.256112
KGS 92.813667
KHR 4388.503781
KMF 492.692348
KPW 973.593818
KRW 1496.11145
KWD 0.331736
KYD 0.899693
KZT 529.209571
LAK 23666.712282
LBP 96727.427546
LKR 317.028981
LRD 207.281246
LSL 19.121181
LTL 3.194189
LVL 0.654353
LYD 5.211223
MAD 10.650071
MDL 19.351134
MGA 4990.344721
MKD 61.593431
MMK 3513.550597
MNT 3675.858501
MOP 8.638975
MRU 42.685052
MUR 49.998851
MVR 16.615803
MWK 1871.979071
MXN 21.704766
MYR 4.750014
MZN 69.136425
NAD 19.121181
NGN 1775.802871
NIO 39.726456
NOK 11.853529
NPR 145.195497
NZD 1.813757
OMR 0.416497
PAB 1.079522
PEN 4.063415
PGK 4.323526
PHP 63.0878
PKR 299.845585
PLN 4.340175
PYG 8594.069934
QAR 3.936022
RON 4.974635
RSD 117.06915
RUB 105.472215
RWF 1468.17908
SAR 4.062528
SBD 9.014985
SCR 14.858132
SDG 650.694392
SEK 11.505015
SGD 1.433109
SHP 0.827738
SLE 24.546105
SLL 22684.197308
SOS 616.981091
SRD 37.135059
STD 22390.479347
SVC 9.44578
SYP 2717.982834
SZL 19.126391
THB 36.488278
TJS 11.497174
TMT 3.786199
TND 3.343929
TOP 2.533619
TRY 37.092885
TTD 7.316438
TWD 34.675112
TZS 2947.826672
UAH 44.651689
UGX 3956.614455
USD 1.081771
UYU 44.924268
UZS 13802.166694
VEF 3918772.931288
VES 45.62094
VND 27406.672856
VUV 128.43008
WST 3.03024
XAF 655.724345
XAG 0.03207
XAU 0.000397
XCD 2.923541
XDR 0.811431
XOF 655.733434
XPF 119.331742
YER 270.794409
ZAR 19.107703
ZMK 9737.239573
ZMW 28.7432
ZWL 348.329879
  • RBGPF

    62.3500

    62.35

    +100%

  • SCS

    -0.3800

    12.21

    -3.11%

  • BCC

    -6.9800

    131.64

    -5.3%

  • NGG

    -0.8800

    65.12

    -1.35%

  • RYCEF

    0.0400

    7.25

    +0.55%

  • CMSC

    -0.1600

    24.57

    -0.65%

  • BCE

    -0.2300

    32.46

    -0.71%

  • RIO

    0.4000

    66.58

    +0.6%

  • GSK

    0.2900

    38.17

    +0.76%

  • CMSD

    -0.0400

    24.84

    -0.16%

  • RELX

    -0.2500

    47.91

    -0.52%

  • JRI

    -0.0900

    12.98

    -0.69%

  • AZN

    -0.7900

    75.22

    -1.05%

  • VOD

    -0.2600

    9.28

    -2.8%

  • BTI

    -0.4500

    34.46

    -1.31%

  • BP

    -1.6900

    29.36

    -5.76%

Are bioplastics really the wonder alternative to petro plastics?
Are bioplastics really the wonder alternative to petro plastics? / Photo: PEDRO PARDO - AFP/File

Are bioplastics really the wonder alternative to petro plastics?

Alternatives to petrochemical-based plastics are emerging, made from everything from banana leaves to tomato skins, especially for food packaging.

Text size:

But questions remain about how biodegradable and compostable they are, as well as their impact on the environment.

- What is biosourced plastic? -

Biosourced means made with less petrol, using non-fossil agricultural products such as sugarcane waste, corn, or wheat starch. Primarily used in packaging, these biosourced plastics account for less than one percent of global plastic production.

But labs around the world are coming up with more and more new plastics derived from tomato skins or banana leaves.

The French chemicals company Arkema, for instance, is pushing PBAT, made from castor oil, which is used to make sports shoes and car interiors.

Bananatex is a biodegradable textile made from banana leaves that has been developed by a Swiss brand and its Taiwanese partners.

However, "biosourced doesn't necessarily have to be 100 percent" from natural materials, warned Christophe Doukhi de Boissoudy, president of the French association for biosourced compostables.

In Europe, the minimum 50 percent requirement to be considered biosourced "will rise to 60 percent in January 2025", he added.

- What is a bioplastic? -

The generic term "bioplastic" can be confusing, as it can mean either biosourced or compostable: the definition varies by country.

But in Europe, the term is clearly defined -- a bioplastic is a polymer that is both biosourced and compostable, either in soil or industrially.

Not all bioplastics completely degrade under natural conditions.

Some, like PLA (polylactic acid), need to be composted industrially at temperatures between 35 and 60 degrees Centigrade (140 degrees Fahrenheit).

One of the most highly developed bioplastics currently used in textiles or for food packaging, PLA was originally fossil-based but is now being made from fermented plant biomass (corn, beet or sugarcane).

"What alarms us is the speed at which China is advancing its legislation to convert its packaging to PLA, aiming to abandon petrochemical plastics, while Europe is stagnating," said Frederic Van Gansberghe, founder of Belgium-based bioplastics company Futerro, which has a factory in China and plans to open one in France in 2026.

- What environmental impact? -

In its "Atlas of Plastic", the Heinrich Boll Foundation estimates that most biosourced plastics are neither completely biodegradable or compostable, and "actually just sidestep the problem".

For Nathalie Gontard, research director at the French National Institute for Agriculture, Food and the Environment, biosourced plastic "has absolutely no benefit" because these polymers don't degrade in natural conditions but instead fragment into micro- and then nano-plastics.

"What matters is biodegradability under natural conditions," she said.

"Biodegradable" is not well-defined, she argued, as some use it for materials that completely degrade in a few months or years, while others refer to much longer periods.

The environmental benefit of biosourced plastic lies in how they reduce the CO2 emissions of the plastics sector. But caution is needed here, experts warn.

"Additional demand for land to grow the raw materials for biosourced plastics can lead to land-use changes or deforestation," the OECD warned, which in turn can increase CO2 emissions.

"By developing bioplastics, we place the burden of manufacturing these materials on agricultural land that should primarily serve to feed the population," insisted Pauline Debrabandere from the NGO Zero Waste.

L.Rossi--NZN