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A huge array of goods and packaging we use in our everyday lives is made of plastic (AFP Photo/JEAN-MICHEL ANDRE) |
But the resilient, supple, light and malleable materials play a key role in our lives and, according to experts, will remain crucial for a long time to come.
Here are a
few things to know about the world of plastic.
How it's
made
The classic
production process involves the distillation and refining of fuel or natural
gas, breaking down hydrocarbons.
Various raw
materials make up the building blocks of the resulting plastic. Monomers build
more complex molecules called polymers -- the scientific name for plastics.
There are
two families of polymers.
Thermoplastics,
accounting for some 80 percent of global plastics consumption, melt when they
are heated and then harden when cooled.
Then there
are thermosets, which do not soften after moulding.
How it's
used
Five
polymers account for the majority -- 71 percent -- of global plastics
consumption.
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Plastic
plays a huge role in our lives (AFP Photo/JUSTIN SULLIVAN)
|
First,
there is polyethylene, found above all in single-use packaging, then
polypropylene, used in car bumpers, dashboards and drinking straws.
Next up is
polystyrene, used for packaging, insulation panels and yoghurt pots.
There is
also polyvinyl chloride -- better known as PVC -- used in windows and drains --
and then polyethylene terephthalate (PET), commonly used for synthetic fibres
or bottles.
Lighter is better
Lighter is better
There is
much innovation in conventional plastics, with new properties being added to
maximise performance.
Lighter is
better, and slimming the volume of plastic is a constant challenge, not least
to reduce the amount of plastic clogging the oceans and to wage war on waste.
But lighter
plastic also means lighter finished products, including in transport.
"The
need for (greater) lightness in auto transport is a massive innovation
factor," Christophe Cabarry, founder and president of SpecialChem, an
online platform connecting sellers and buyers of chemicals and materials, told
AFP.
A few grams
a year are being shaved down, even on products as mundane as plastic bottles.
![]() |
Despite the
war on plastic bags, they are still a huge problem for the
environment (AFP
Photo/Munir UZ ZAMAN)
|
What
about the environment?
The wait is
on for the breakthrough of bioplastics -- plastics made using biodegradable
materials or natural recyclable materials.
"There
is much innovation in the sector," says Cabarry.
But of the
2.05 million tonnes of bioplastics produced worldwide last year less than half
was actually biodegradable, according to European Bioplastics, an industry
association.
The
association put their market penetration at barely 0.75 percent in 2017, owing
to bioplastic's much higher costs.
But we
recycle, right?
Europe
managed to re-use around 31 percent of 26 million tonnes of plastics waste in
2016.
"Europe
has initiated a transition from a linear towards a circular and resource
efficient society", says the PlasticsEurope association of manufacturers.
But the
rate in the United States is much lower, at 10 percent, and across the world,
only 9 percent of the nine billion tonnes of plastic produced to date has been
recycled, a recent UN report said.
Some 12
million tonnes per year, mostly in the form of single-use packaging, are dumped
into the world's oceans, creating an ecological nightmare, according to
Greenpeace.
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