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Research shows plant-based polymers can disappear within seven months (ucsd.edu)
211 points by geox 8 months ago | hide | past | favorite | 118 comments



Just so anyone doesn't get the wrong idea, this is about a specific algae-based polymer being developed by UCSD.

> Microplastics can take anywhere from 100 to 1,000 years to break down and, in the meantime, our planet and bodies are becoming more polluted with these materials every day

In general "biodegradable plastics" currently on the market should still be heavily scrutinized. So far it mostly has just meant it gets to the microplastics stage faster than other plastics. Not only does this have negative health consequences for us and fish, but it also makes it much more difficult to ever recycle and re-use these plastics

https://www.biopak.com/au/resources/biodegradable-plastic-pr...

Still, it's exciting to see progress on the possibility of an actually sustainable version of biodegradable plastic. Hopefully it can scale and doesn't lead to other micro pollutants


>Not only does this have negative health consequences for us and fish, but it also makes it much more difficult to ever recycle and re-use these plastics

Are there any actual concerns with pure PLA?


"Environments without the necessary conditions will see very slow decomposition akin to that of non-bioplastics, not fully decomposing for hundreds or thousands of years.[59]"

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Polylactic_acid#Degradation

No mention of its actual life cycle as it turns into a microplastic ie so it should be presumed dangerous in the same ways.


As a microplastic absorbed by organisms, it is quickly absorbed. But idk of what absorption means to the absorbing organism, hopefully we have some data on that. Absorbed might not be the same as harmlessly absorbed and metabolized.


PLA pretty much just breaks down into microplastics unless it's decomposed in an industrial composting facility.


There's no such thing as pure PLA, like all industrial plastics it's filled with additives to improve its properties and these have endocrine disrupting / carcinogenic properties just like all the others.


Endocrine disrupting plasticizers are not used in all plastics, and they’re not used in basic PLA.

You really cant generalize “all industrial plastics” as “plastic” is way too broad a concept. Good engineering plastics like PEI/PEEK dont even need to use any additives like plasticizers, stabilizers, cross linkers etc.


I suspect they are referring specifically to PLA.


PLA etc are just fine, they might not biodegrade quickly outside of a compost pile, but they are not making indefinitely persistent microplastics. Indeed, medical implants made of PLA are reabsorbed in mammals. The same cannot be said of PETE fibers accumulating in various tissues.


> PLA etc are just fine

Define "just fine". PLA microplastics can have strongly hormonal effects. In european perch, for example, they were even found to significantly alter social behavior.[0] MPs can cause tissue damage, oxidative stress, and changes in immune-related gene expression as well as antioxidant status in fish[1] and humans may experience oxidative stress, cytotoxicity, neurotoxicity, immune system disruption, and transfer of MPs to other tissues after being exposed to them.[1][2]

[0] https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S004896972...

[1] https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fenvs.2022.8272...

[2] https://www.undp.org/kosovo/blog/microplastics-human-health-...


Just a note, PLA is industrially compostable, but it won't biodegrade quickly if at all in your backyard compost pile


It will biodegrade just laying around anywhere, with not even a backyard composter, 1000x sooner than all the normal plastics.

Some other things can even go faster and easier, but you can use pla without feeling guilty of anything.

It doesn't do the world any good to make anyone wary of such a huge improvement.


1000x sooner is still a really long time, I've seen numbers like 80 years thrown around. And that's with normal PLA, not PLA+ and other popular modifications that may have very different properties. You are right that it's significantly better than ABS for example, but "less environmentally hostile" and "environmentally friendly" are not the same and imho a lot of the info out there is simply misleading in that regard.


It doesn't do the world any good to lie about the degree to which things help either! We can be realistic about our need to properly dispose of PLA in an industrial composter, and still accept that it's a massive improvement over other plastics


When they say break down they just mean even more micro than microplastics right? It’s not truly breaking down right?


Nope, truly breaking down and digested by bacteria.

> The last measurement involved chemical analysis via gas chromatography/mass spectrometry (GCMS), which detected the presence of the monomers used to make the plastic, indicating that the polymer was being broken to its starting plant materials. Scanning-electron microscopy further showed how microorganisms colonize the biodegradable microplastics during composting.


No I mean regular plastics. They’re not truly going to get broken down in a 100 years, they’re just going to be really tiny.


If you like set it on fire it decomposes into gas to the point they're not the same compound, they don't come back down into micro-particle slug of same thing like gaseous gold would, and there is always that bacteria known to scientists that can break down certain kind of plastics in that manner for almost all common plastics


Regular plastics are truly broken down over the long term by environmental bacteria.

"Degradation and metabolism of synthetic plastics and associated products by Pseudomonas sp.: capabilities and challenges"

https://enviromicro-journals.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/pdf...

Long-term exposure to sunlight and physical abrasion contributes to the formation of microplastics (<5 mm). Microplastics can be degraded further by microorganisms. Consequently, biological degradation and subsequent metabolism have the potential to eliminate plastics from contaminated environments.

...

With respect to plastic degradation, the species of the genus Pseudomonas are amongst the most cited degraders of various extents for a wide range of plastic polymers. Complete biologically mediated elimination of plastic polymers first requires breakdown of the polymer into smaller oligomers and, eventually, monomers that can pass through the cell membrane followed by assimilation and subsequent intracellular metabolism. Here, we present a review of the capabilities of species of the genus Pseudomonas to degrade and metabolize synthetic plastics.


I interpret "disappear" to mean "dissolve completely". Not so ?


Always good news to hear alternative being made possible, but it doesn't matter if none of the big industries are willing to make the change.

Always this need to wait 5 years or so until European Union decide to fine them if they don't get their shit together.


There is also an upcoming UN plastic treaty that could potentially exert some influence here.


This actual sounds positive. The UN isn’t a silver bullet of course but we can’t keep polluting at this scale.


The UN, in general, is pretty impotent, especially for purpose which it was created. However, this kind of stuff is exactly the kind of thing that it has successfully done in the past.


Not with that attitude we can’t! (Humanity in general)


[flagged]


So far California (at least used to) and the EU seem to do more than the rest of the world together.


Yes, better than anybody else. That its not enough aint their fault.


This is a good chance to ask something I've wondered for a while, why isn't cellophane more commonly used as an alternative to plastic film? Is it coatings on cellophane that make it just as bad as plastic? Or does the environmental impact of producing cellophane outweigh the fact that it's biodegradable?


Can you save me the rabbit hole time dump and tell me what makes cellophane so much better or potentially not viable in your opinion?


Cellophane isn't all better. It is biodegradable, but traditionally at least, carbon disulfide used in making of it is some nasty stuff[1].

[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carbon_disulfide#Health_effect...


in terms of microplastics in our bodies, is there actually any evidence these are harmful?

i know intuitively they would be, but i haven’t actually found good evidence when i’ve gone searching


There was a recent study [1] that found they could dramatically raise the risk of adverse cardiovascular events

[1]. https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2024/mar/06/microsco...


Sounds like something that ought to be backed up by statistics... say, a rise in otherwise-unexplained cardiovascular events that coincides with microplastic production.

Haven't seen any such studies, but I'm sure they're out there if you look hard enough.


> These effects consist of oxidative stress, DNA damage, organ dysfunction, metabolic disorder, immune response, neurotoxicity, as well as reproductive and developmental toxicity. In addition, the epidemiological evidence suggests that a variety of chronic diseases may be related to microplastics exposure.

https://pubs.acs.org/doi/10.1021/envhealth.3c00052



I can think of a few confounding factors for that...


this seems significantly better than past studies i’ve seen, thanks


Right, but that comment is not a study, it's just someone saying there's a study..... They might be wrong, mistaken, or whatever... Sorry if it seems churlish, but if you are after studies, that comment is not what you want.


Study was linked in article, but for those who don't want to go digging: https://www.nejm.org/doi/10.1056/NEJMoa2309822


The comment that now has a link in it, did not have a link in it when I posted my comment!


Googling “microplastic cardiovascular” brought up both the study itself and a dozen news articles about it. In general, if you think a comment is low-quality because readers can’t easily find the source, you can help by posting that link yourself.



i mean i looked up the study, it was very easy to find as it is covered in nature and recent


As far as I can tell, the company with the IP is making individual consumer products, like shoes and surfboard parts [1]. I wish I could buy the material, to make my own biodegradable parts. It would also be nice to see packaging materials in their lineup

[1] https://www.algenesismaterials.com/algenesis-products


Oh boy, not this trope again. The so-called "biodegradable" plastics that weren't (Fuck the plastics industry and their greenwashing). I'm suspicious every time this is raised because mostly the starch-based single use items have been shown to degrade in a reasonable timeframe.


I think that we've know that for a very, very long time: cellulose, i.e. wood or paper, is an example.


I suspect the sweet spot actually lies a bit higher than 7 months. You don't want stuff disintegrating while in use.

...call it 5 or 10 years. But anything that gets us away from the functionally "forever" of current plastics would be a win


7 months in industrial compost, not 7 months in use! Hopefully under 'normal conditions' it does already last 5 or 10 years...


it doesnt seem like `the market` will fix this abhorrent use of plastic for packaging and other fast moving consumer goods. This is where states have to interfere and ban plastic usage. How can it be allowed to package 80g of food (like ham, cheese etc.) that has a shelf-life of max. 14 days in 10g+ of plastic that will be around for hundreds of years? If you go to any super market there is no consumer choice but to buy most of your food wrapped in plastic, amounting to kilos of plastic per family and month :(


This seems like an appropriate place for the government to step in and price negative externalities in the form of taxes. Taxes are effective as bans but they better handle edge cases where plastic may still be required for whatever reason.


Where do you account for lobbying from the oil industry and corruption?


In a perfect world where governments are competent, I would love a law stating that packaging must not last more than 10x times the shelf life of the product itself. Ham expires after 3 days? Put it in packaging that lasts no more than 30 days when left outside.


Something that only lasts 30 days is going to partially start breaking down on day 1, I don't think people want that touching their meat.


Just brainstorming here: anything temperature-based? Starts degrading above 10C for example. In your fridge it's no problem, chuck it out of the window like a savage and it will eventually degrade, unless you live on the poles.

Sounds like a good avenue for (organic) material science research.


Does something like that exist? Can something like that exist? don't forget it needs to be food safe - including whatever it breaks down to, and whatever bacteria might grow on it - so long as the food itself is safe to eat.

Materials science has come a long way, but some problems still are not solved and it isn't always clear if the problem can be solved.


Water ice fits the description, but it's hard to see how that would be practical.



Ok 100, or 500, both way below the hundreds of years they now last.


You know, this is simply not true.

I have found old buried plastic bags, from supermarkets - I remember the bag style from just a few years ago. The bags had severely degraded. When I tried to pick one up, it fell apart into small pieces, what integrity it had was gone. I've had the same experience with bags left in lofts - they degrade.

From my personal experience, I therefore assume that plastics already disintegrate after about 10 years, not 100 or 500 years, as you state.


You're just talking about a bag degrading into smaller and smaller plastic particles (microplastics) while the people above are talking about biodegrading into natural elements.


You think I'm unfair in comparing a plastic bag to plastic packaging? If you follow this particular thread, they were talking about packaging.


No, you're just confusing macroscopic level of degradation (the whole structure degrades) and microscopic degradation (molecules are being degraded).

The problem with plastic is that while the macroscopic structure can be altered in just a few years (depending on the conditions), the resulting parts aren't being metabolized away by micro-organisms and they remain as small plastic chunks, and then micro-plastic, then nano plastic, until they eventually break down entirely after decades, which is very unlike what happens with what we call biodegradable materials.


So, in your view, although the bag I see is breaking up into small brittle pieces, there are even smaller pieces that are not been degraded? Is that a theory to you, or do you have first hand knowledge?

If I have understood your position correctly, this is certainly counterintuitive... because if there is not much plastic bag left, you'd think that whatever broke down the bag, would also be able to break down these smaller bits (microplastics). But you are saying that small bits of the bag remain for decades, even though I can't see them.. I just don't see why small bits of plastic bag would remain, when it is evident that something in the ground already degraded the plastic bag as a whole.


> So, in your view, although the bag I see is breaking up into small brittle pieces, there are even smaller pieces that are not been degraded?

They are being degraded, just slowly.

> Is that a theory to you, or do you have first hand knowledge?

It's not a theory of mine, you can find the explanation in practically any explanation of what "microplastics" are.

> If I have understood your position correctly, this is certainly counterintuitive... because if there is not much plastic bag left, you'd think that whatever broke down the bag, would also be able to break down these smaller bits (microplastics)

That's correct, and it eventually happens, the process is just very slow, let me try explaining it to you:

Plastics are made of very long polymer chains, composed of the same small molecule (monomer) chained together millions of times. Let's assume we have a plastic for which half[1] of the connections break down in 50 years. If I'm not messing the math up, it means that every year you lose roughly 1% of the connections between the molecule. So, after one year, your chain of 1 million molecules have been cut in 10,000 smaller piece of 100 monomers. Then the next year, there's again 10,000 connections that will break (~1% of the remaining 990,000 connections), but this time it will just double the number of pieces (if you cut a piece 10 times, you and up with 11 pieces, if you have again 10 scissor hits on the next 11 pieces, you'll end up with 21 pieces).

Of course my model is not entirely accurate because I looked only at the 1D molecular structure, when plastics are actually 3D meshes of these chains, so multiple chains are holding one another and it slows down the macroscopic effect, but you should get the idea of why it first degrades relatively quickly at macro scale and then slower at smaller scale.

[1] half times are a good way to model degradations of chemical compounds, at least the “spontaneous” ones, but keep in mind it's a model: it's not flawless and it's not able to describe every degradation phenomenon (for instance it fails to describe degradation from microorganisms that can grow on a substrate they are degrading hence the “spontaneous” qualifier above).


Thank you for taking the time to explain.

I get how these connections are meant to break down, though not to the detail you provided. It could be like you say, though I don't why the degradation wouldn't be concurrent - ie I don't get why half times are a good way to model plastic degradation, when all of the plastic is exposed to 'scissor hits' all of the times. Ie, once the scissor hits start to impact the bag, I would think the bag would soon fully disintegrate.

Assuming it is like you say, if a plastic bag is brittle, going to dust after just 10 years after being in the ground, (I'm using supermarket bag design as a means to figure out the age of the bag,) that is far from 50 years to break down half the connections. This is too say the metric to measure degradation seems wrong to me... Or perhaps the metric is the case in artificial, sterile conditions, which the ground is not.


> ie I don't get why half times are a good way to model plastic degradation, when all of the plastic is exposed to 'scissor hits' all of the times.

They are all exposed to scissor hits all the time, but it's a stochastic scissor. You can think of every connection rolling many dices every second, and whenever they all land on 1 the molecule breaks. This kind of behavior leads to exponential decay, which is subject to half life.

> Assuming it is like you say, if a plastic bag is brittle, going to dust after just 10 years after being in the ground, (I'm using supermarket bag design as a means to figure out the age of the bag,) that is far from 50 years to break down half the connections.

Why? You don't need to break all connections to break to dust. They are trillions of connections to break if you want to degrade the compound to its primitive molecule, but only thousands if you want to shred it to pieces. Keep in mind that if the monomer measures 1nm, a piece of plastic of 10um still has 10,000 connections. And if at the beginning you have a piece of plastic that's 10cm long (all reasoning are 1D here for simplicity), you just need to cut it 1000 times to get to 10um (so at 10um you're still much closer to the beginning than to the end, even though the plastic is now invisible).

> Or perhaps the metric is the case in artificial, sterile conditions, which the ground is not.

As I said before, it's a model and you're right it's not entirely accurate. Yet plastic doesn't have much enemies living in the ground, so it's pretty close to being sterile from the perspective of the plastic. And that's actually the problem we're facing right now.


I still don't see why microbes or UV light or salt work in this linear process, where half lives come into play.

> Yet plastic doesn't have much enemies living in the ground

But this is the very point I'm making in my first post in this thread - that I found a fairly recent plastic bag (~10 years old) that was badly degraded.

Perhaps there aren't adverse conditions in the lab. Or perhaps the measurements are wrong? Perhaps these micro plastics are too small to see... But the info we are given should correlate with one's personal verification, I hope you agree.


> why microbes or UV light or salt work in this linear process

It's not linear, it's exponential! And, as I said before microbes are special and are not well represented by half-life models, but they aren't too relevant for plastics (and that's the reason we call plastics ”non-biodegradable”)

> that I found a fairly recent plastic bags (~10 years old) that was badly degraded

I've spent the past two comments explaining why this happens, and why the plastic bag can appear degraded even though there's little degradation overall in the material itself.

It's OK that you don't understand the phenomenon, I'm probably at fault here for not explaining it well enough although I did my best. But if you don't understand it, please at least admit that it's what happening even if it sounds counter-intuitive to you.

It's not the lab conditions that are at fault here, it's your understanding of the mechanism and my limited abilities to explain them to you.

If you are curious I'm pretty sure you can find much better explanation on YouTube or elsewhere, as the internet is crowded with extraordinary science teachers. And if you aren't that curious (that's OK, life is short we cannot learn everything) then at least please admit the result and move on. Do not assume that “everybody else is wrong including polymer scientists, and microplastics don't exist because once I've seen a bag that was in bad shape”. It's just your intuition is just wrong, and that's OK.


> It's OK that you don't understand the phenomenon, I'm probably at fault here for not explaining it well enough although I did my best. But if you don't understand it, please at least admit that it's what happening even if it sounds counter-intuitive to you.

Not at all - I thank you. I am curious and want to understand. I simply don't accept counter-intuitive claims without good reason. I accept that such things as counter-intuitive claims exist. But, even so, I need to know how to verify things personally.

So, if I see plastics that are turned to dust after just 10 years, but another is saying that the dust continues to degrade for 500 years, I can consider the claim - but I want to know how it can be verified. Once you are talking about stuff you can't see or confirm, you are in thrall to experts. Unfortunately, when information or tools are not available to others, this provides cover of darkness for all sorts of poor ideas.

I can imagine all sorts of claims... but I'm after knowledge, not hearsay. And knowledge is not a communal endeavour - it is personal, based in personal verification. To me, even scientific claims are hearsay - you of course will know about the reproducibility crisis, and will no doubt have countless examples of how science presumed to know one thing, then changed position. Of course, this is the scientific method - nothing is set in stone. But science present monolithic conclusions that might be wrong. And its not like scientific endeavours cannot be steered by money.

The philosophical issue in play here relates to knowledge. What is it that knows - is it a group or an individual? Can it be that one part of science state this or that to be true, and everyone else must then uniformly accept that pronouncement? A pronouncement that cannot be verified personally? Even though we know that all science is the output of flawed humans? Etc.

Thanks for the exchange.


It's good to be skeptical and keep an open mind on stuff even when there's a well accepted “truth”. But on the flip hand you should be cautious not to let it evolve into anti-intellectualism and complete mistrust in scientific output (especially because calls to common sense are a very common manipulation tactics).

Science is a social thing, and as such it's far from an ethereal ideal of knowledge production. But at the same time, it's the best tool we have by far…

Maybe re-reading my explanation tomorrow or another day can help you grasp the phenomenon better ;).

Have a nice day.


Adjust the variable in consequence, we're talking about a fictional material. You're using a strawman there, just to be in contradiction.


"Last no more than 30 days" with currently available degradable plastics just means it breaks down into microplastics really quickly and pollutes the environment with them.


> In a perfect world where governments are competent

Yet the general consensus seems to be that in a perfect world governments are democratic, and therefore beholden to the will of the people, not authoritarian like you suggest. But if the will of the people wants to see a change in the use of plastic, they don't need it to flow through government, they can simply change their buying habits.


You cannot buy something that doesn't exist or is otherwise unavailable.

And good packaging materials rarely make for good marketing.


> You cannot buy something that doesn't exist or is otherwise unavailable.

Of course you can. Facilitating such a thing is Kickstarter's entire business model, as an example. You can also refrain from buying, communicating to other people that "I'm not buying your product unless you..." which gives really strong incentive to do things differently.

It's not like government is some kind of magical thing. It's just people. And in the case of democratic government, it's the very same people.


> You can also refrain from buying

Day 56 after I refrained from buying food: I'm now dead.


If only the people had chosen to enact a law that made it illegal to sell you food packaged in harmful packaging that you had already decided not to buy. I mean, you'd still be dead, but you'd have 56 days of satisfaction knowing that your voice was heard.


We're talking about negative externalities, of which pollution is a perfect example: the effects of pollution are spread across everyone, no matter who emits it, so no one has an individual incentive to change their buying habits. It's a coordination problem, which can be solved democratically by the voters demanding an overall change in incentives (such as an appropriate tax on single-use non-biodegradable plastics).


> We're talking about negative externalities

No. Not sure why would you would choose to reply before reading the comments, but since you have... we are quite explicitly talking about at least one consumer expecting food packaging to degrade within a similar period as the food contained within, with a suggestion that an authoritarian government in a perfect world would recognize that as a good idea and force it upon the people.

But the general consensus seems to be that, in a perfect world, governments are democratic – a notion you do not seem to discount.

Under a democracy, if he stands alone in that desire of short-life packaging, nothing is going to change. No business is going to cater to his unique want (well, maybe if he's exceedingly rich and is willing to pay disproportionally for it) and government is not going to act on the wishes of one person (that would be undemocratic). If a majority of people share in that desire, though, then businesses would face pressure to provide when consumers make that choice clear. Any business that fails to comply will suffer the consequences of lost profits. The people can enact a law that prevents themselves from buying the product they already don't want to buy, but that doesn't accomplish anything. They've already decided they don't want to buy it!

Democratic government is useful for cleaning up minority groups who try to act against the wishes of the majority, but in this particular case you have not even made clear why the minority would be stuck on buying 'forever' packaging or what businesses would gain from catering to the minority. People don't care about food packaging that much. Once the majority are buying short-life packaging, the small number of people who want to watch the world burn will be priced out of the market anyway. As such, there is no need for government. The people can just do it...

...and if they don't, that's the end of it. Magic isn't going to swoop in and save the day. The democratic government is nothing other than the very same people who have already decided that, in this scenario, they don't want to do anything.

But maybe what you're really struggling to say is that democracy wouldn't be found in a perfect world? Fair enough, but I'm still not sure that's the general consensus.


> they can simply change their buying habits.

Sure. And where am I supposed to find affordable food not wrapped in plastic? Ideally in my city and not 100kms away, and not 10 times the price. And now that you're at it, please tell me where I can buy food that is not already polluted by microplastics?

This kind of argument is a just a “blaming the victim” kind of reasoning.


> And where am I supposed to find affordable food not wrapped in plastic?

The same place you expect to find it when you outlaw food wrapped in plastic. It's not going to disappear until people stop buying it. You can create a law to remind you to not buy food wrapped in plastic, or you can just not buy food wrapped in plastic. So long as the population is on board with the idea of not buying food wrapped in plastic, there is absolutely no difference.

If you are suggesting that the population isn't on board and everyone other than you is quite happy to keep buying food wrapped in plastic then a democratic government would never create such a law in the first place, rendering the entire discussion moot. That would not be in alignment with the will of the people. Democracy does not serve individual whims.


> The same place you expect to find it when you outlaw food wrapped in plastic. It's not going to disappear until people stop buying it.

People aren't going to stop buying it as long as it's the only option!

> You can create a law to remind you to not buy food wrapped in plastic,

It's not about reminding you not to buy, it's about banning people from selling. You know, as they already do for dangerous stuff like Kinder Suprise in the US…

> or you can just not buy food wrapped in plastic.

You cannot because nobody is selling it.

> If you're suggesting that the population isn't on board, then a democratic government would never create such a law in the first place. It would not be the will of the people.

The population is on board, but population-wide synchronization don't happen for free you know. Here's a fun example: here in Europe the majority of people is against daylight saving time. Yet there is one. That's stupid you'd say, because they could actually collectively decide not to change their clocks' time and call it a day, DST is gone. But in fact, doing so would require an enormous amount of coordination, and this kind of amount of coordination is the exact reason why we've created the State in the first place! And it's actually its only power! (armed force: literally started as just a well synchronized militia, same for law enforcement, collecting taxes: just make sure to get a big enough group to raid the house of the people who refuse to pay, etc.)


> People aren't going to stop buying it as long as it's the only option!

Then that's it. Game over. Until buyers stop buying what's already out there, vendors don't have an avenue to sell any kind of replacement. Fortunately, your view is quite disconnected from reality. In the real world people talk, negotiate, and work to satisfy the buyer's wants and needs.

> It's not about reminding you not to buy, it's about banning people from selling. You know, as they already do for dangerous stuff like Kinder Suprise in the US…

Not to mention illicit drugs. They, of course, straight up vanished from the US as soon as it became illegal to sell them. Oh wait.

Let's be real: If someone is buying, there will be someone ready to sell. The law ultimately has to compel the buyer to back away. You can say the onus is on the seller, but you're just looking at the opposite side of the same coin.

> Yet there is one.

Meaning that if I decide to keep my clocks on a constant schedule it's straight to jail for me? If not, how does that relate to a law that would penalize you if you sell (or buy) plastic-wrapped food? In this part of the world, at least, if you want to ignore DST, go nuts. DST only exists because the people just do it, not because there is some legal threat that keeps them on the straight and narrow.

> and this kind of amount of coordination is the exact reason why we've created the State in the first place!

If the state is democratic, the people have to coordinate first. Without such coordination, there is no way for democracy to take place. Once the people have coordinated their will, they can just do it. Like you point out with DST – at least to the extent of its existence in my part of the world – you don't need a law to force people to do what they've already decided to do. They can just do it. Simple as that.

Such laws are useful for keeping the minority dissenters in line with the will of the majority, but in this case once the majority has stopped buying plastic-wrapped food, it is highly unlikely there will be a compelling business case to serve the small handful of people who want to see the world burn. I mean, even if you don't give a rat's ass about the environment, are you really going to go well out of your way to buy plastic-wrapped food? Not likely. You're just going to buy the food the same way everyone else is. It will be cheaper and much, much, much more convenient.

The previous commenter's idea of an authoritative higher power forcing the people to bend to his will is great and all, but doesn't work with democracy. If a perfect world sees that government be a democracy, as the prevailing consensus seems to indicate, then that idea is out the window in said perfect world.


> Then that's it. Game over. Until buyers stop buying what's already out there, vendors don't have an avenue to sell anything else.

That's pretty fascinating to see that you're reading literally everything backward, like not only the real world around you but even what I'm writing! I'm talking about the fact that nobody is offering the possibility to buy stuff that's not wrapped (and for legit business reasons, it's much easier on their supply-chain management to do so this way), and you're interpreting as if the problem was on the demand side.

And everything is in the same vein: I'm talking about a situation where the supply side is definitely not providing what the consumer want, at least a significant fraction of the population, and you insist in arguing as if plastic packaging was driven by consumer demand: it is not it's cost saving and supply chain ease of use on the supply side, not demand. And that's why you can't find any: why would a business bother doing what the customer want when they can get away with costs savings because customers have nowhere to go.

> Meaning that if I decide to keep my clocks on a constant schedule, it's straight to jail for me?

Chances are that you'll straight up lose your job after a couple days. Then you'll see how your freedom not to change your clock time is respected when you're being evicted because you could not pay your rents due to lack of revenue. By the way that's a good illustration of the difference between freedom in a vacuum, and the actual exercise of freedom in a socially interconnected world where your agency is in fact very constrained by material factors.

> If the state is democratic, the people have to coordinate first. Without such coordination, there is no way for democracy to take place.

Fascinatingly steady with backward-driven thinking indeed! You can't have democracy if you don't have a state entity that's able to run the elections and enforce them. The democratic character of the state comes later, once the people already in charge have been confirmed through the election, or when they decided to step down if they lose. Coordination comes from the state, which can then replicate itself thanks to this coordination. No state started with an election, at the very beginning was always somebody getting power through other means (be it a foreign invader, a previously ruling king, or a group of insurrectionist).

> Laws are useful for keeping the minority dissenters in line with the will of the majority, but in this case once the majority has stopped buying plastic-wrapped food, it is highly unlikely there will be a compelling business case to serve the small handful of people who want to see the world burn.

But without enforcement, nobody will ever be able to buy such food, because nobody has an incentive to sell it in the first place. It's cheaper to sell plastic wrapped food, and because the externalities come for free, the business isn't paying the cost of their behavior. Buyers, or at least a significant fraction of it, realize the cost, but they don't have any leverage on the business because there's nowhere to go. The same way I'm not buying a smartphone that's being manufactured in my country, because there isn't any.

> Laws are useful for keeping the minority dissenters in line with the will of the majority

Not only. Laws are also setting the state budget, the tax levels or food and drugs safety standards, your interpretation of what law is supposed to do is indeed very limited in comparison to what it actually is in the real world.

> he previous commenter's idea of a higher power forcing the people to bend to his will is great and all, but doesn't work with democracy.

No, there's no non-democratic high power in charge up there, it's just a matter of democratic state intervening to fix a market imperfection (negative externalities), but in your now infamous skill to misinterpret everything, you managed somehow invented some authoritarian power in the discussion. Well done.

Maybe you could try reading what other people are writing twice before commenting, or maybe three or four times, just to be sure you're not making things up in your head, because that's a recurring theme at that point.

Edit: oh I found this gem in another comment of yours (https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=39783570)

Not sure why would you would choose to reply before reading the comments

The irony is absolutely delicious.


I am seeing lots of problems with your argument here:

  * One, the amount of carbon that get wasted if that sandwich goes bad is immense compared to the small amount of carbon it takes to make the plastic.
  * Two, in places with decent waste management, what is wrong with the plastic sitting in a landfill.
  * Three, assuming you are still going to protect food items, the alternatives are all heavier materials that will increase transportation costs and pollution.


I can see this playing out in one of two ways: 1. Suddenly shelf lives are massively extended. I think this would be a good thing. 2. Shelf lives are decreased to accommodate degradable packaging.

Given the people who are in the food supply chain are probably going to be sourcing the same packaging from maybe 2-3 vendors, I don’t see anyone able to differentiate themselves on packaging tech.


> shelf lives are massively extended. I think this would be a good thing.

50 years ago many fruits and vegetables had a lot shorter shelf life, however that has been greatly extended due to selected breeding. For example tomatoes used to have a shelf life of around 3 days, but now it's 3 weeks or more.

The disadvantage of this is that now there are a few varieties that dominate what you can buy in supermarkets, and they are optimized for economic features. This means other features like taste and nutrient content are a lot worse than it was 50 years ago.


> If you go to any super market there is no consumer choice but to buy most of your food wrapped in plastic, amounting to kilos of plastic per family and month

This is corporations 'socialising' the expense of their decisions via writing laws. Why should they pay?


...enabling more planned obsolescence than ever thought possible.

Why make things last when you can have them "naturally" self-destruct and force you to buy again, under the guise of greenwashing?


The use of degradable polymers is for things that are single use. Plastic bags, straws, etc. nobody is trying to replace your iPad with a compostable version that disolves in humidity.

It's cynical bordering on humor to look at the accumulation of forever trash in our oceans and blood and say "well at least we can build something that may last with all this poison". Nobody does that anyway.


It's also commonly used in 3D printing, i.e. PLA.

PLA is stable enough in normal circumstances -- you need specific equipment to make it degrade -- but once broken down to microplastics it doesn't last long. Otherwise it's nearly an ideal plastic for printing; brittle, but strong and incredibly easy to print. With some additives you can get rid of the brittleness, though I'm not sure how those would degrade.

I see no reason you couldn't make plastic straws from PLA. Clothing might not last as long, but plastic clothing never lasts that long in any case; I prefer cotton.


A lot of commercially available "biodegradable"/"compostable" plastic is already made out of PLA.


> nobody is trying to replace your iPad with a compostable version that disolves in humidity.

Ssh - you will give the electronics industry ideas :)


Plastic bags, straws, etc

Those are the least likely to degrade into microplastics anyway, unlike clothing fibers and the like, and that is already assuming you believe that microplastics have any actual effects.

nobody is trying to replace your iPad with a compostable version that disolves in humidity.

The article talks about phone cases and clothing.


This comment contradicts itself: if microplastics in clothing are a serious issue, then we should be looking seriously at clothes that degrade without producing microplastics.

(All clothing degrades; presumably you don’t object to wool or accuse wool sweaters of planned obsolescence.)


Or we can just burn the clothes. Almost no clothing in Europe, biodegradable or not, ends up in the ocean.


My understanding is that much of the West’s second-hand and overstock clothes ends up in countries like Ghana, where it does end up in waterways[1]. This has presumably increased over time due to fast fashion, which is a large market in Europe (like in the US).

[1]: https://www.theguardian.com/global-development/2023/jun/05/y...


Fast fashion is horrible. That article really shows on aspect of it. It has turned a large chunk of a recycling process into dumping.


Microplastics are emitted from clothing and flushed into the waste water system, and from there to oceans, every time you do laundry. This is considered to be the main source of microplastic pollution, including in the EU unless they managed something revolutionary that I'm not aware of.

https://www.nature.com/articles/s41598-019-43023-x


You really need to cite a source on this subject, measuring the industrial waste is very difficult and any articles state that "we found this but anyway, it's difficult to track efficiently the industry wastes".


Absolutely shit tons of fluff comes off off polyester clothes and ends up in the drain.

We could probably design washing machines to filter it better, granted.


So, like ... cotton?


Sure. But the reality is that cotton is expensive and resource intensive compared to other materials; absent a global effort to ban plastic clothes, it seems worthwhile to make those clothes less environmentally damaging.


Cotton also shrinks when wet and has poor thermal properties - polymer blend fabrics perform better in the cold, and are lighter and cheaper than wool. Goretex is wonderful stuff, but its also made of '"forever-plastics" and is known to slowly leach into runoff. Finding a polymer that can be cleanly manufactured for a competitive price with similar properties would be wonderful, as long as theres also a method for it to degrade safely when discarded.


Microplastics are accumulating at pretty high levels all over the food chain, right? The burden of proof should be on the folks who want to run the “let’s all eat this new thing in great quantities” experiment.


No the burden of proof is on people who claim this will reduce the release of microplastics. Most plastic pollution comes from a few countries in Asia and from fishing.

https://ourworldindata.org/ocean-plastics

What we need to do is assist these few countries with better waste management, that is what by far would have the biggest impact. Not saying we shouldn't do other things too like trying to find new materials for fishing nets or reducing fishing but plastic bags in the west is not a significant source.


We should also lead by example by not just exporting our plastic trash to other countries.


That’s a related but different issue, we should figure out if they are safe, help other countries deal with them, and stop producing as many ourselves, at the same time.


The story of humanity can be summed up as: "what if we changed our environment without understanding it?" with both wonderful and wretched consequences.

The same fires that poison the air we breathe also power life saving medical equipment so that we can keep breathing.

Micro plastics, endocrine disrupters and more have been unleashed. I am sure their effects will prove to be less than positive on both humans and wildlife.

But in trying to snuff out the next great environmental crisis, will we account for the benefits we've derived from the use of these materials when we do our cost-benefit analysis? The effects on innovation?

Did curiosity kill the cat, but save cats?


We have think of it differently now, stuff like lead and asbestos were bad, but localized mostly. We’re running the microplastic experiment on everybody simultaneously.


The phone cases made by RhinoShield are the aftermarket kind that fit over the phone, not the integrated case.


American plastic trash does not end up in the ocean.


Have you spent time in any major American coastal city or one with an ocean bound river. There is so much plastic litter. I'm in Manhattan and I see plastic litter every day. If even some of it doesn't get swept up it's a short trip to the East River, a tidal estuary of the Atlantic Ocean. This isn't a theory these things are gathering into the oceans and in our bodies.


I'm sure Manhattan has more trash than either of us would wish.

But I think looking around Times Square is not the best way to study this scientifically.

The studies that have been done in the Great Pacific Garbage Patch shows that it's majority from China, with Indonesia a strong seconds. US contributes < 1%.

This would be a more convincing post if I could point to sources. I don't have time to dig those up, so this data is from my memory. Take it for what it is...


The arguments against planned obsolescence are partially environmental. If planned obsolescence isn't going away, at least this aspect is improved. Consider medical disposables, or one-time packaging that still requires medium term storage survivability.


I'll take environmentally responsible planned obsolescence over the current situation.

Nothing lasts. Durable plastic and metal goods become damaged or worn. What then? When repair, reuse, or recycling is not socioeconomically attractive, having some sort of naturally sustainable cycle would be nice, wouldn't it?

Even if I have to buy a new phone case every seven months, if it's part of a sustainable cycle that becomes quite economical due to the massive scale -- wouldn't that be better than maintaining the current production of long-lived plastics?

This strikes me as an example of capitalism learning something from biology.


The problem with "environmentally responsible" planned obsolescence is that it's never environmentally responsible to throw out what would otherwise be a functional device but for the fact that it was made to break down on a specific timetable. The three Rs are "reduce, reuse, recycle", not "recycle, recycle, recycle". Making the product degrade prematurely means you can't reuse, and by proxy, having to buy a new one means you're not reducing.

Degradable devices sounds like the sort of thing intended to assuage the consciences of very rich people who buy the newest iPhone every year.


Meanwhile, a lot of people end up buying cars sooner than they would have had to otherwise, because someone thought it was a good, environmentally-sound idea to make electrical wiring out of tasty, tasty soybeans.

That's capitalism taking a lesson from nature.




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