Tuesday, October 10, 2017

A Student In Iceland May Have Just Saved The Planet


 
I do hope that this can hold up in practise.  Otherwise i do wish that we simply enforce a return to glass and use deposits to ensure compliance.  Better yet apply a $1000 per ton recovery charge for all waste plastic  and make the industry pay for it.

That would produce a thriving plastic fishing industry happily at work.  It would also clean up all the landfills as well.

Costly, yes, but not impossible and the industry would be fully committed to resolving the problem.  This is something the UN should be doing.

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A Student In Iceland May Have Just Saved The Planet

This is a huge step in the right direction.

https://healthfoodsoul.com/student-just-saved-the-planet/

Americans throw away 35 billion plastic bottles every year and that’s a problem because it takes plastic around 450 years to decompose, which is kind of a long time. Ari Jónsson is a product design student who studies at the Icelandic Academy of Arts. Recently he came up with a way to create a completely biodegradable water bottle using red algae powder.



Ari Jónsson exhibited his biodegradable bottle at a design festival in Reykjavik earlier this month.


After reading about the amount of plastic humans waste every day Ari decided to do something about it.

“I read that 50 per cent of plastic is used once and then thrown away so I feel there is an urgent need to find ways to replace some of the unreal amount of plastic we make.”

Then Ari asked the million dollar question: “Why are we using materials that take hundreds of years to break down in nature to drink from once and then throw away?”


To show Ari doesn’t just talk a big game, he started studying the strengths and weaknesses of certain substances, eventually landing on a solution to our plastic problem made from algae.


The substance can be formed into a bottle by adding water, heat, placing the resulting jelly into a mold and then putting the mold into a freezer.


If the bottle remains full of water it will keep its shape, as soon as it’s empty it starts to decompose – you couldn’t ask for a better alternative.



You can even eat the bottle when you’re done, making Ari’s design both practical and waste free – hopefully the world takes notice.

water bottles emgn 8

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