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BPA Comment on US Plastics Pact

US PLASTICS PACT

Their Report on PROBLEMATIC AND UNNECESSARY MATERIALS is fundamentally mistaken insofar as it relates to compostable and biodegradable plastics.

  1. The type of plastic marketed as “compostable” is problematic and unnecessary
  2. Oxo-biodegradable plastic is necessary and is not
A “COMPOSTABLE”

Plastic marketed as compostable is:

PROBLEMATIC because it:

1. Does not convert into compost (EN13432 and ASTMD6400 require it to convert into C02 gas).
2. Is intended for a deliberate linear process and is not circular. The material is intended to be

wasted by conversion into CO2 and lost to atmosphere.

3. Cannot be re-used, recycled, or made from recyclate
4. Leaves microplastics in the compost and in the open environment
5. Does not deal with the problem of plastic litter in the environment which cannot be collected

UNNECESSARY, because it is not wanted by industrial composters and local authorities. People should not be encouraged to buy plastic bags for home composting, when they could use a bucket. It does not in any event biodegrade properly in a home compost.

It should not be described as compostable or biodegradable. It should not be encouraged, and should instead be banned. For details see https://www.biodeg.org/subjects-of-interest/composting/

 

B.    OXO-BIODEGRADABLE

NECESSARY

This type of plastic has been specifically designed to deal with plastic which escapes into the environment from which it cannot be collected for recycling, composting or anything else. This is not an intended disposal route – it is an insurance in case waste-management fails. It is the ONLY way to deal plastic in the open environment and is therefore NECESSARY.

NON-PROBLEMATIC

Oxo-biodegradable plastic is not problematic because:

  1. It does not create microplastics. It is not disputed by anyone that most of the microplastics found in the environment are coming from the fragmentation of ordinary plastic, and that they are very persistent. The European Chemicals Agency were not satisfied that oxo- biodegradable plastic creates microplastics, and ECHA have never provided a scientific dossier in support of any ban on oxo-biodegradable plastic.
  2. It should be used and disposed of in the same as ordinary It can be re-used and recycled and is perfectly compatible with a circular economy. See https://www.biodeg.org/subjects-of-interest/recycling-2/
  3. It will fully biodegrade. Eurofins and Intertek have done tests showing biodegradation of 88.9% within 121 days and 74% within 180 days, respectively. No reason has been shown why biodegradation should stop before it is complete. The percentage required by ATM D6400 for “compostable” plastic is 90%. Even if it did not fully biodegrade it would still be better than ordinary plastic, which would not have biodegraded at all.

ASTM D6400 for “compostable” plastic requires biodegradation to be tested in a laboratory (not in a compost heap) but some critics suggest that oxo-biodegradable plastic should be tested in outdoor conditions. As to the correlation between laboratory tests and the real world, see the statement of Dr. Graham Swift, https://www.biodeg.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/02/Swift- evidence-to-BEIS.pdf who says “It has been my experience that results from laboratory testing are very likely to be reproduced in the real world. I can see no cause for concern that they would not, and have seen no evidence that they have not.”

The Oxomar project was a three-year interdisciplinary study, sponsored by the French Government https://www.biodeg.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/07/Final-report-OXOMAR-10032021.pdf and the scientists said “The goal of this task (C3Task2) was to evaluate the biodegradation of OXO-bio in marine waters. This task has been divided in two parts by (i) following several months of OXO-bio- colonization by marine microorganisms under natural conditions and (ii) by evaluating the biodegradability of OXO under natural conditions as compared to a cultivated microorganism with known PE-biodegradation abilities.”

They reported that “We have obtained congruent results from our multidisciplinary approach that clearly shows that oxo-biodegradable plastics biodegrade in seawater and do so with a significantly higher efficiency than conventional plastics. The oxidation obtained due to the d2w prodegradant catalyst was found to be of crucial importance in the degradation process.”

See also the report from Queen Mary University London https://www.biodeg.org/wp- content/uploads/2022/10/QM-published-report-11.2.20-1.pdf

Para 2.6 says “prior to testing, samples of LDPE and oxo‐LDPE were surface‐weathered in sea water for 82 days, undergoing natural variations in sunlight and UV intensity.”

  1. It leaves no toxic residues, and is tested to OECD ecotoxicity standards
  2. It is not disputed that biodegradation will be many times faster than ordinary plastic. Queen Mary University say up to 90 times faster https://www.biodeg.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/10/QM- published-report-11.2.20-1.pdf para 2.3
  3. Although recycling is preferable to biodegradation, it is not possible to recycle plastic which has escaped into the open environment from which it cannot realistically be The ONLY way to deal with it is biodegradation

End.

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