U.S. Military Goes Big for Bioplastics

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An army travels on its stomach, and the U.S. military is no exception. The impact is evident in the packaging, especially plastic packaging, left over from MRE’s, Unitized Group Rations, and other packaged food supplies. That’s about to change, big time. Food waste composting is on the horizon for U.S. military bases and even field operations, and close on its heels is a compostable bioplastic for military use.

Mounds of Military Plastic

SERDP, the Strategic Environmental Research and Development Program, is the Department of Defense’s lead agency on developing priority solutions for sustainable military operations. SERDP estimates that the civilian population in North America uses 1.5 billion pounds of plastic film per year and 8.5 billion pounds of plastic foam. Based on those figures, the U.S. military in Iraq alone, with a force of 135,000 troops, generates about 446 million pounds of plastic waste per year.

The logistics of waste disposal for the U.S. military are becoming increasingly burdensome, especially concerning the fuel needed to incinerate waste. Extra fuel means extra convoys, and more troops put needlessly at risk. With food-related military waste accounting for a large percentage of the overall volume, the incentive to switch to biodegradable packaging is a strong one.
Metabolix Bioplastics and the Military

For the past several years, the bioplastics company Metabolix has been working with the U.S. military to develop biodegradable plastic packaging, using plants as feedstock. It won’t be a first for Metabolix, which recently partnered with Target to make bioplastic gift cards from sugar.
Military Bioplastic from Corn – or Cow Pats?

Corn has fallen out of favor as a truly sustainable feedstock for biofuel, and the same goes for bioplastic, too. But if current developments are any indication, the U.S. military may eventually settle on any number of alternatives. Just to name a few there’s switchgrass, of course, a weedy looking plant called crambe, bacteria, and even cow pats.

With food waste composting on the horizon for U.S. military bases and even field operations, civilians will have to run to catch up with the military’s progress in sustainability.

http://cleantechnica.com/2009/04/14/us-military-goes-big-for-bioplastics/

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One Step Closer to a Compostable Car, Thanks to Bioplastics

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Some time in the sparkling green future, the global food giant Archer Daniels Midland might have a hand in developing the world’s first compostable car. And we might have to thank the Belgians for that, too. Sounds far-fetched, right? Not when you throw in the U.S. military and a small Massachusetts company that specializes in bioplastics. The Bioplastics Connection Massachusetts-based Metabolix is working with the Strategic Environmental Research and Development Program (SERDP), to develop its proprietary bioplastic, Mirel™ for military use in food packaging. The logistics are compelling. Tons of plastic go into wrapping and shipping MRE’s and base food supplies. Disposing of all that waste requires fuel, which in turn requires a convoy, and convoys need to be manned – and in some cases, defended. Cutting down on non-biodegradable waste is one way to trim costs and improve troop safety.

The Archer Daniels Midland Connection ADM has teamed up with Metabolix in a joint venture called Telles, to market Mirel bioplastic. The first plant capable of producing Mirel bioplastic in commercial quantites is under construction next to an ADM corn mill in Clinton, Iowa, expected to go online later this year. In the great green scheme of things, corn is not an ideal feedstock, but it’s possible that alternatives are in the future; Metabolix is working on other crops such as switchgrass and oilseeds. Biodegradable or Compostable? Biodegradability refers to the capability of a material to be converted into carbon dioxide by microorganisms. Compostability is held to a higher standard – a lot of them, in fact. In order to be considered compostable, a material has to meet standards for heavy metals and any other substance that could affect the plants that grow in it. Enter the Belgians< This is where the rubber hits the road. A Belgian firm called Vinçotte is emerging as a leader in certifying materials for meeting European Norm (EN) standards for compostability. In addition to covering Europe, Vinçotte is also active in Morocco, Japan, and the U.S. The applicable standard is EN 13432: 200. On May 6, Metabolix announced that Vinçotte has certified Mirel bioplastic for compostability with its OK Compost and OK Compost HOME marks, meaning that the material is certified to biodegrade appropriately for compost under both industrial and household conditions. EN Bioplastic Standards, the U.S. Military, and Compostable Cars With the U.S. military and supermarket-to-the-world ADM both throwing their considerable weight behind a bioplastic that’s not merely biodegradable but compostable, there’s a chance for the economics of scale to kick in. One thing holding bioplastics back from the mass market is price, so once that barrier falls, anything is possible. Researchers are already working on a way to make car parts out of coconut husks, so using a compostable bioplastic doesn’t stretch the imagination that much farther. For that matter, the U.S. military is also looking into recycling used bioplastic to make diesel fuel. The next step: how big is the market for an edible car? Image: Inuyaki.com at flickr. Reprinted with permission from Cleantechnica.com

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