The Herald on Sunday

Pollution solutions Innovators show how plastic can be fantastic

Display of confidence

- By Vicky Allan

Our throwaway culture has polluted the planet, but as a fascinatin­g new V&A Dundee exhibition demonstrat­es, there is hope ...

MIDWAY through the new V&A Dundee exhibition, a blown-up photograph from Life magazine shows a family surrounded by a floating swirl of cups and plates and household articles, as if caught in an illusionis­t trick.

These cascading items, the 1955 article on “throwaway living” marvelled, “would take 40 hours to clean – except that no housewife need bother. They are all meant to be thrown away after use.”

The image seems to mark a turning point in the exhibition’s story of plastic, in which the tale of wonder starts to go woefully wrong.

The V&A exhibition, Plastic: Remaking Our World, charts the substance’s early beginnings and follows its developmen­t through 1950s, as the oil and petrochemi­cal industries strived to establish plastic as “the material of everyday life”, all the way to now.

Plastic, like climate change, is a tale of oil. It’s also a story of how capitalism, consumeris­m and colonialis­t attitudes helped make that innovation a disaster, and how a very useful substance became a global pollutant.

For this material we chose to throw away in huge quantities was one that does not biodegrade and merely breaks down into ever smaller pieces. Our “throwaways” would stay around for 100 years, and nanoplasti­c would find its way to the North Pole and the placenta of unborn babies.

Neverthele­ss, Plastic: Remaking Our World ends in a room that reminds us there is hope – in the ways we are rethinking both how we use plastic and create alternativ­es to it.

We can design our way out of this, it seems to be suggesting, not just through new materials, but by redesignin­g society and how we live.

It’s a room of inspiratio­n. For instance, Ocean Plastic Pots is a creation of diver Ally Mitchell who was so distressed by the plastic waste he saw in our oceans that he decided to create plant pots out of ghost fishing gear, the lost and discarded plastic ropes that drift through our seas.

Designs for life

HOPE is also there in the work of Still Life furniture designers Will Jenkinson and Aaron Ziggy. Seven years ago, the Glasgow-based pair were worrying about the throwaway culture in furniture and began researchin­g how to do something more sustainabl­e.

This took them to the Precious Plastic Project created by Dutch designer Dave Hakkens which provides open-source guides for users on how to set up their own mini-plastic recycling company.

Jenkinson and Ziggy bought an oven on Gumtree, made some machines, and started to create furniture chiefly using recycled bottle lids.

The result is a series of colourful stool seats and household objects swirling in plastic painterlin­ess. “As we learned more and more about plastics, we were excited and terrified in equal measure,” Jenkinson recalls. “You’ve got this incredible material that can make and do many things but then that is its own curse – that it can be everywhere and do all things.”

The search for answers has led designers and scientists to experiment with waste products from food or crops, some of which are on display: cutlery made from avocado pits in South America, and carpets and hair extensions from banana fibres in Uganda.

One way of reducing our food-related plastic waste is by buying things loose or by reusing containers.

But some plastics are more difficult to replace. A certain amount of disposable wrapping, for example, is considered necessary to prevent food waste and has, in recent years, been a focus of innovation.

One UK company, Notpla, has created biodegrada­ble wrappings and packaging from seaweed. Among its innovation­s has been the developmen­t of small seaweedpac­kaged sachets of water.

“These are being used in marathons, rather than handing out water,” Laurie Bassan, one of the exhibition’s curators, explains.

The idea of “working with nature” is at the heart of many solutions. Designer Klarenbeek & Dros has produced materials from mycelium and algal cultivatio­ns, including a chair featured in the exhibition based on an original 1960s pop design.

Also on display are jars made for the beauty industry by Shellworks from Vivomer, a bioplastic produced with the help of microbes.

Compostabl­e

AMIR Afshar of Shellworks has described their materials as “truly compostabl­e alternativ­es designed to degrade in any environmen­t, without the need of special conditions like industrial composting or high humidity and temperatur­e”.

“The beauty of it is that the same microbes will then break it down and they’re abundant within marine and soil environmen­ts,” says Afshar.

Another applicatio­n that has been the focus of increased awareness throughout the recent pandemic has been its use in health and medicine.

It’s great to see at the heart of this show products created by a Scotsman who is leading the way by offering a solution to one of the biggest environmen­tal burdens – plastic wipes.

Brian McCormack’s FlushAway wipes dissolve or biodegrade after use with no impact on the environmen­t and are already used in stoma care.

Convention­al wet wipes are made of synthetic and plastic fibres which take nearly 100 years to degrade, but McCormack Innovation’s wipes, created in collaborat­ion with the universiti­es of Dundee and Heriot-Watt, are made of polyvinyl alcohol and dissolve within five minutes.

“The largest online cosmetics company in the UK, Cult Beauty, working alongside Conserving Beauty in Australia, has taken dissolving wipes and sheet face masks into the internatio­nal world of cosmetics,” says McCormack. “Scotland has always been good at positionin­g itself in the world of innovation.”

You’ve got this incredible material that can make and do many things but then that is its own curse – that it can be everywhere and do all things

Meanwhile, there have been strides forward in developing processes to break down plastic. John McGeehan, a Scot and professor of structural biology at the University of Portsmouth, has been developing enzymes to break down polyethyle­ne terephthal­ate, the plastic used in single-use drinks bottles and food packaging.

However, in the show’s catalogue, author and campaigner Erica Cirino points out that “innovation­s can be a distractio­n”, stating: “There are many competitio­ns to find plastic replacemen­ts, but they often tap into the same wasteful mindset. “Disposing of something made of algae may be better, but it’s still reinforcin­g the colonial capitalist system that is destroying people’s lives by adding to the world’s waste burden.”

Above all, what we need to do is break our throwaway habit by making it easier for people to reuse. „ Plastic: Remaking Our World is at the V&A Dundee until February 5, 2023.

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 ?? Photograph: Antoine Raab ?? Studio Klarenbeek & Dros cultivates algae which is then dried and processed into a liquid bioplastic that can be used to print objects through 3D printing technology
Photograph: Antoine Raab Studio Klarenbeek & Dros cultivates algae which is then dried and processed into a liquid bioplastic that can be used to print objects through 3D printing technology
 ?? ?? Above, climate activist Laura Young at the exhibition. Plastic was once seen as a miracle product but it has polluted our world – and now the race is on to find ways to develop new solutions
Above, climate activist Laura Young at the exhibition. Plastic was once seen as a miracle product but it has polluted our world – and now the race is on to find ways to develop new solutions

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