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Biodegradable plastic bags developed in SA

biodegradable plastic bags Image: CSIR
biodegradable plastic bags Image: CSIR

South Africans will soon be able to dispose of their plastic bags along with the rest of their waste without having to worry about any possible negative effects on the environment.

A team of local scientists from the Council for Scientific and Industrial Research (CSIR) Polymer and Composite

Research Group in Port Elizabeth broke new ground when they recently developed 100% biodegradable plastic bags made from agricultural by-products.

The maize and sugar cane bio-based bags are completely biodegradable in mud‚ soil‚ water and compost and break down completely in just three to six months.

So advanced is the technology that the bags can also be recycled and major retailers such as Woolworths and Pick n Pay are already in line to test the product in a pilot phase.

On Monday senior researcher at the CSIR Sudhakar Muniyasamy‚ who led the team that made the discovery‚ said that the new bags had the same durability as normal plastic bags but with “many more advantages”.

“These biodegradable plastic bags can improve market opportunities and end-user industry and reduce the amount of plastic waste in South Africa‚” said Muniyasamy.

“The technology is mainly designed to meet physical-chemical properties but after their use when disposed in natural environments it undergoes biodegradation in landfill‚ compost and marine water by process of natural microorganisms in a timely and efficient manner.”

 In South Africa about 90% of current conventional plastics bags are made from petroleum based chemical materials and are not biodegradable in natural environments.

 Muniyasamy said that the new bags currently cost two to three times more to manufacture than normal bags‚ but that costs would come down once they began to up scale production.

“We hope that by September we will be able to give them some pilot samples to try out and we expect to be in the commercial stage by early next year.”

Sustainability Manager at Plastics SA Jacques Lightfoot believed that the new bags would be good for the environment but had concerns over its effect on existing jobs in the industry.

“This bag would have a lot of solutions to what we are facing right now and has its place as long as it doesn’t destroy our recycling sector‚” Lightfoot said.

“We have 1‚800 convertors in the industry making plastic products with around about 50‚000 employees‚ and 231 recyclers with close to 5‚000 employees.

 “The problem for us is that the normal bags are also being recycled so if the new bags are not marked correctly they will contaminate normal bags if they are stored together. We hope it doesn’t affect our recycling industry.”

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