Write a short note on Bioplastics and its impacts

Bioplastics

  • Bio-based plastics means they have been developed from biomass (plants) such as corn, sugarcane, vegetable oil or wood pulp. 
  • Biodegradable plastics are those which possess the characteristics of biodegradability and composability.
  • They can be converted into natural substances like water, carbon dioxide, and compost by the action of micro-organisms in the environment.
  • Bioplastics are biodegradable materials that come from renewable sources and can be used to reduce the problem of contaminating plastic waste that is suffocating the planet and contaminating the environment.
  • As an alternative to plastic, the use of bioplastics is being promoted, consisting in obtaining natural polymers from agricultural, cellulose or potato and corn starch waste.

Positive Impact of Bioplastics

    • Better than petro plastics in terms of fossil-fuel consumption, greenhouse gas emissions and energy efficiency.
    • Easy to recycle and non-toxic.
    • Reduce carbon footprint
    • Their production reduces non-biodegradable waste that contaminates the environment
    • They do not contain additives that are harmful to health, such as phthalates or bisphenol A
  • These are degradable, equally resistant and versatile, already used in agriculture, textile industry, medicine

 Negative Impact of Bioplastics

  • Bioplastics are inferior to petro plastics.
  • Bio-plastic production requires almost 80% of the energy required to produce common plastic.
  • The biggest concern about compostable plastic is it would take around 40 days to compost during which time it would have already been ingested by several small animal forms, with a likely injurious impact.
  • And if they touch the bottom of the sea, they may not degrade at all, because it is much colder than the 30 degrees Celsius that is their ideal degradation temperature.
  • Microplastics cause extreme damage to marine life.
  • People cannot differentiate bioplastics from regular plastics in the trash.
  • In India, there is hardly any segregation of wet and dry waste so it is unlikely that even the best bioplastics will be pulled out for treatment.
  • Not all bioplastics are biodegradable

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