uh-oh! bioplastics are bad-- unless you compost them properly.
source: http://www.smithsonianmag.com/science-nature/10022381.html
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- KasiaC
- added this
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- groups:
- Green, Earth and Science
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- tags:
- Green, Earth and Science, Environment, Corn, 4 more
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khsing
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This just means that we're going to have to eat what we eat with and then have cake afterwards with our bare hands.
- 4 years ago
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khsing
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robertogrijalva
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Solution #2: Adobe water jugs and eating with our faces.
- 4 years ago
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robertogrijalva
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jsaraco
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And use BioBags for all the food scraps, etc.. that we compost. Why? Recently, the city of San Francisco selected BioBag to promote their residential food waste collection program.
- 4 years ago
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jsaraco
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regina
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we live in san francisco, where there is citywide composting. all the more reason for Current to set up compost bin in kitchenette areas, since our city offers the luxury of pickup. otherwise, our hard-fought-for corn forks are a big waste--aside from being good to chew up during stressful meetings...
- 4 years ago
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regina
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maria_hh
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P.S. Try the thing with the hot water, it won't work. (I dare you!)
- 4 years ago
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maria_hh
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KasiaC
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FYI -- my source is this article from the Smithsonian Institution.
- 4 years ago
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KasiaC
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KasiaC
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The first line of this MSNBC article... "As a chief advocate for corn farmers around the country, Rob Litterer will be working the halls of Congress this fall to push for increased ethanol production..."
- 4 years ago
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KasiaC
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maria_hh
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Landfills are anaerobic environments (no oxygen), so pretty much nothing biodegrades in them. Even paper can sit there for decades. Compostable plastics won't even break down in your backyard compost heap (or by the side of the road), they need to go to a special commercial composting facility (read the article above!):
"PLA is said to decompose into carbon dioxide and water in a controlled composting environment in fewer than 90 days. Whats a controlled composting environment? Not your backyard bin, pit or tumbling barrel. Its a large facility where compostessentially, plant scraps being digested by microbes into fertilizerreaches 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"
- 4 years ago
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maria_hh
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ycrepeau
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Do you have any source to support your point?
A good journalist is bound by the ethic of verifying his or her sources. With an accusation (such your words about the Corn lobby), you should provide the sources as well.
You should also be prudent when attacking the lobby X (here the corn lobby) if you do not do the job of the lobby Y.
The oil based plastic industry is working very hard trying to rehabilitate their stuff. One of their strong argument is that petroleum based plastics requires less petroleum than glass or corn based plastic. Transporting liquids in a plastic bottle requires less gazoline than the same amount of liquid in a glass bottle.
- 4 years ago
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ycrepeau
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dbeckmann
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Sounds pretty corny to me...
- 4 years ago
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dbeckmann
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shampton
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MISINFORMATION: " 1. Although they're biodegradable, no one composts them. We don't. If they go in a landfill, they don't save space, and you can't recycle them, so putting them in the recycling bin just messes with the system."
>>>actually, they disintegrate and dissolve, with heat (pour some hot water in one and see what happens).
DO NOT put them in a recycling bin, put them in the trash! (the heat from the landfill will compost them).
- 4 years ago
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shampton
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danlevine
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Can't things compost in the landfills?
- 4 years ago
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danlevine
