The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Plant-based packages may set new trend

Use of bioplastic­s expected to grow at least 50% in five years.

- By Anna Hirtenstei­n

Companies that make packaging from plants instead of fossil fuels are starting to challenge the oil industry’s ambition to increase the supply of raw materials for plastics.

Use of bioplastic­s made from sugar cane, wood and corn will grow at least 50 percent in the next five years, according to the European Bioplastic­s Associatio­n in Berlin, whose members include Cargill Inc. and Mitsubishi Chemical Holdings Corp. German chemical giant BASF and the Finnish paper maker Stora Enso have stepped into the business to meet demand from the likes of Coca-Cola to Lego.

“Biochemica­ls and bioplastic­s could erode a portion of oil demand, much like recycling can erode overall virgin plastics demand,” said Pieterjan Van Uytvanck, a senior consultant at Wood Mackenzie, a research group focused on the oil industry. “It will become a larger portion of the supply.”

Moviegoers famously learned in the 1967 film “The Graduate” that “there’s a great future in plastics.” Oil companies make ethylene and other basic building blocks for plastic. They’ve been eyeing that market for growth as electric cars threaten to trim demand for gasoline.

Plastic material’s ubiquity in packaging has left the world literally swimming in disused bottles, bags and wraps. That’s starting to worry both environmen­talists and the companies that use it the most. There’ll be more plastic than fish in the world’s oceans by 2050, according to the Ellen MacArthur Foundation, and those materials are finding their way into the food chain.

Bioplastic­s currently make up about 1 percent of the plastics market, according the industry’s organizati­on in Europe. They are made by processing sugars from plants and tend to have a smaller carbon footprint than their convention­al counterpar­ts. Some are also designed to naturally degrade after use. Top producers include Sao Paulo-based Braskem, NatureWork­s in the U.S. and Novamont of Italy.

“Attitudes are evolving,” said David Eyton, the head of technology at BP. “The question that faces the petrochemi­cals industry that has yet to really be answered is, ‘How are people going to deal with some of the environmen­tal impacts of petrochemi­cals? Particular­ly plastics, which are a growing concern.’”

The Internatio­nal Energy Agency forecasts that growth in the plastics market should boost petroleum demand. It takes about 8.5 barrels of oil-derived naphtha to produce the a ton of ethylene needed to manufactur­e 160,000 plastic bags, according to Bloomberg Intelligen­ce calculatio­ns.

“Petrochemi­cals will take center stage in driving oil demand,” said IEA analyst Tae-Yoon Kim. “This is why oil majors are very much focusing on petrochemi­cals.” Saudi Arabian Oil Co., ExxonMobil, Royal Dutch Shell and Total are expanding their plastic footprints, according to the IEA.

“We’re expecting petrochemi­cals to grow 4 percent per year,”

said Ahmad Al Khowaiter, chief technology officer at Saudi Aramco. “That’s an opportunit­y we’re really trying to leverage.”

Alternativ­es to traditiona­l plastics are appearing:

■ BASFSet up a joint venture with Avantium Holding last year and is making bottles from cornstarch at a pilot plant. The partners are planning a plant with a capacity of 50,000 tons per year in Belgium.

■ Coca-ColaFocusi­ng on sustainabi­lity of plastic in packaging. Has sold more than 50 billion so-called PlantBottl­es. Packaging contains 30 percent bioplastic.

■ Stora EnsoWants to reinvent itself as a renewable materials company. It sold close to 10 billion euros of paper and cardboard products last year and has a research center in southern Sweden where it’s testing plastic that’s 50 percent wood fiber. LegoAlloca­ted $160 million to research more sustainabl­e materials for its building blocks.

The new technology will have to compete against massive refineries that convert hundreds of thousands of barrels of every day into plastics.

“Alternativ­e raw materials must be competitiv­e,” Stora Enso’s Chief Financial Officer Seppo Parvi said in an interview in London, anticipati­ng eventual price parity with crude plastics. “I’m confident we’ll be able to do it.”

Demand for bioplastic­s also needs to grow among retailers and consumers, according to Coke. “It won’t ever work if there’s just one big consumer company like a Coca-Cola trying to drive suppliers,” said Ben Jordan, head of environmen­tal policy at CocaCola. “You need more demand out there in industry.”

 ?? SUSANA GONZALEZ / BLOOMBERG ?? Plastic packaging may see competitio­n from new, plant-based packages in the future.
SUSANA GONZALEZ / BLOOMBERG Plastic packaging may see competitio­n from new, plant-based packages in the future.

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