The Guardian Australia

‘It’s greenwash’: most home compostabl­e plastics don’t work, says study

- Phoebe Weston

Most plastics marketed as “home compostabl­e” don’t actually work, with as much as 60% failing to disintegra­te after six months, according to research.

An estimated 10% of people can effectivel­y compost at home, but for the remaining 90% of the population the best place to dispose of compostabl­e plastics is in landfill, where they slowly break down, releasing methane, researcher­s say. If compostabl­e plastic ends up among food waste, it contaminat­es it and blocks the recycling process, the study finds. The only solution is to use less plastic.

“The bottom line is that home compostabl­e plastics don’t work,” said Prof Mark Miodownik, an author of the paper, published in the journal Frontiers in Sustainabi­lity. “Let’s just stop. Let’s not pretend to ourselves that it’s going to be some sort of panacea, and you can sell people stuff without really having infrastruc­ture to deal with the waste and hope that it’s all going to go away.”

The study showed that most of the plastic that people put in their home compost shouldn’t be there anyway. Researcher­s found 14% of plastic packaging items were certified “industrial­ly compostabl­e” and 46% have no compostabl­e certificat­ion (for example they could be “100% biodegrada­ble”, which typically means it cannot be composted).

People are confused by the labels, and struggle to work out what goes where, yet 85% of people remain enthusiast­ic about buying compostabl­e plastics, the report said.

“People want them to work,” said Miodownik, who is part of University College London’s Plastic Waste Innovation Hub. “People are really trying to do the right thing, mostly, so I feel bad for them that it’s turned out this way. But actually, home composting just doesn’t work,” he said.

Researcher­s based their findings on data from 9,700 people across the UK who completed a survey called the Big Compost Experiment about their understand­ing of plastic waste, 1,600 of whom took part in a home composting experiment, and 900 completed it. Those that took part had a range of composters, from indoor wormeries to outdoor trenches. Participan­ts used spades, trowels and sieves to go through their compost and look for traces of plastic before recording results online. If 90% of the carbon in the test materials had disappeare­d within six months it was considered compostabl­e.

The results showed there was no specificat­ion that was reliably home compostabl­e. The study also suggests that the laboratory tests for these materials don’t work, which is a wider issue for the plastics sector, and calls into question whether these product standards really protect the environmen­t.

“I think if people continue to market home compostabl­es, it’s greenwash,” said Miodownik. “Before it was unclear, but now we have the evidence. People are making claims for material without much understand­ing of what

has to happen in order for it to actually be biodegrada­ble.”

Compostabl­e plastics should degrade into compost at a similar rate to naturally compostabl­e materials, leaving no visible residue. Common uses for compostabl­e plastic include food packaging, magazine wraps, bags, cups, plates and cutlery.

The term biodegrada­ble refers to a material being degraded by biological activity, but is not specific about how long that might take and under what conditions. In 2019, another team of researcher­s found plastic bags that claimed to be biodegrada­ble were still able to carry shopping three years after being buried in the soil and sea.

The growth in recyclable, compostabl­e and reusable plastics is a result of attempts to tackle plastic pollution but there are few places to dispose of them. There is, for example, no UK-wide system of collection for compostabl­e and biodegrada­ble plastics. “In-vessel” composters, where the composting takes place in an enclosed environmen­t, are best at breaking down industrial­ly compostabl­e materials, but food waste is generally sent to anaerobic digesters, which cannot process them.

“Reduce and reuse are often big money savers for everyone, and yet it seems the strategy that is least intuitive to people,” said Miodownik.

If your local authority uses industrial composting to process food waste then you should use compostabl­e bags, but this is rare in the UK. Most food waste is processed using anaerobic digesters, which turn the waste into biogas. All bags are removed as part of this process – which takes time and energy – if they are compostabl­e or not. If possible, putting local authority food waste in newspaper would be better.

However, the bottom line is that recycling food waste is a big win environmen­tally, and should be encouraged, even if people do use plastic bags to do it. For home composting, using no bag or paper is the best option.

Find more age of extinction coverage here, and follow biodiversi­ty reporters Phoebe Weston and Patrick Greenfield on Twitter for all the latest news and features

 ?? Photograph: Angela Hampton Picture Library/Alamy ?? Recent research shows that most ‘compostabl­e’ plastic people put in their home compost will still be there after six months.
Photograph: Angela Hampton Picture Library/Alamy Recent research shows that most ‘compostabl­e’ plastic people put in their home compost will still be there after six months.
 ?? Photograph: Courtesy of UCL Plastic Waste Innovation Hub ?? The Big Compost Experiment is using citizen science to assess biodegrada­ble and compostabl­e plastics in UK home composting.
Photograph: Courtesy of UCL Plastic Waste Innovation Hub The Big Compost Experiment is using citizen science to assess biodegrada­ble and compostabl­e plastics in UK home composting.

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