Bangkok Post

PTTGC studying biodegrada­ble polyester for line-up

- YUTHANA PRAIWAN

PTT Global Chemical Plc (PTTGC), Thailand’s largest petrochemi­cal maker, is conducting R&D to produce bioplastic polylactic acid (PLA) to add new commercial products to its roster soon. The company expects the R&D to be concluded this year. PLA is a 180-day biodegrada­ble and bioactive thermoplas­tic aliphatic polyester derived from renewable resources such as corn starch (in the US and Canada); cassava roots, chips or starch (mostly in Asia); and sugar cane (the rest of the world). “PTTGC aims to build a PLA production plant in Thailand using sugar cane, but the R&D process has been ongoing since 2012, and the company wants to complete it before moving forward,” said Patiparn Sukorndham­an, chief operating officer for downstream petrochemi­cal business. SET-listed Global Green Chemical Plc (GGC), a subsidiary of PTTGC, is assigned as the R&D head, along with US-based Myriant Corporatio­n. Mr Patiparn said PTTGC and GGC will use the R&D findings to build the PLA production facility next to a sugarcane plantation in Nakhon Sawan province. The prototype capacity will produce five tonnes of PLA per production cycle. The PLA operation is a part of a biochemica­l complex i n Nakhon Sawan, where GGC signed a memorandum of understand­ing with SET-listed Kaset Thai Internatio­nal Sugar Corporatio­n Plc (KTIS) in February 2018 to invest 7.65 billion baht in the first phase. Each firm owns half of the country’s first bioeconomi­c industrial complex, which will be developed after a feasibilit­y study that began in 2016 is completed. The project has already been granted privileges from the Board of Investment and is scheduled to start constructi­on by 2019 and operations in 2020. The complex occupies 2,000 rai adjacent to KTIS’s milling plant and sugarcane cultivatio­n area in Takhli district, Nakhon Sawan province. The facility has a sugar-cane crushing capacity of 2.4 million tonnes a year, an ethanol production capacity of 600,000 litres a day and a biomass power plant with a capacity of 85 megawatts. The overall complex will be worth 40 billion baht. “The PLA production facility will be developed for the second phase of the complex,” Mr Patiparn said. “The complex will be developed along with GGC and KTIS policies to put off singleuse plastic production in the next five years, as normal plastic requires roughly 400 years to decay, so we will promote the consumptio­n of biodegrada­ble plastic.” PTTGC is teaming up with Silpakorn University to conduct research into designing paper cups and drinking straws coated with polybutyle­ne succinate acid, a biodegrada­ble plastic. During the R&D process, PTTGC plans to attract food and drinks companies to use biodegrada­ble plastic for the study.

 ??  ?? Patiparn: Prototype headed to complex
Patiparn: Prototype headed to complex

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