5 BEST Alternatives to Finally Replace Plastic

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  • Опубликовано: 24 июл 2024
  • 5 Best Alternatives to Finally Replace Plastic. Order yourself a LARQ Bottle PureVis 2 to go plastic free and enjoy ice cold water throughout the entire day. bylarq.com/undecided5 Plastic is firmly established in our daily lives, but we all know plastic recycling doesn’t really happen. So what can we do? We can convert starches, fungi, seaweed, heck, even shrimp tails into plastic alternatives and bioplastic. Let’s review five of the most interesting advances I’ve come across - including that shrimpy stuff. But are any of these plastic alternatives actually viable? Or are we literally grasping at straws?
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    00:00 - Intro
    01:37 - PLA
    03:39 - Mycelium
    06:00 - Seaweed
    08:31 - Hemp
    10:50 - Shrimp
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Комментарии • 1,2 тыс.

  • @UndecidedMF
    @UndecidedMF  16 дней назад +60

    Which alternative plastics are you the most curious about? Order yourself a LARQ Bottle PureVis 2 to go plastic free and enjoy ice cold water throughout the entire day. bylarq.com/undecided5
    If you liked this, check out Are We Getting Scammed with Solar? ruclips.net/video/BD7aCkLwR7U/видео.html

    • @paytonturner1421
      @paytonturner1421 16 дней назад +9

      Hemp can be a good plastics replace.

    • @WeBeGood06
      @WeBeGood06 16 дней назад +3

      @@paytonturner1421 You have to ask yourself, is the hemp plastic "cheaper" than plastic? If not, economics says people will use plastic. Both hemp and plastic can be recycled into energy at the end of life of the object. Incineration is Recycling into electricity.

    • @WeBeGood06
      @WeBeGood06 16 дней назад +1

      I don't understand why you want to talk about alternatives to plastic. It's only economically viable if it can be produced in massive quantities at a cheaper price. Using oil found in the ground as plastic before using as fuel, uses the oil twice instead of once. Come back and talk about alternatives to plastics after no more Oil is used for Energy.

    • @robertaitken1514
      @robertaitken1514 15 дней назад +4

      Hi Matt, thanks for the great shows. Which plastic is also healthy for us boys? Plastic with no estrogen.

    • @paulas_lens
      @paulas_lens 15 дней назад +1

      That Larq is very interesting.

  • @jopo7996
    @jopo7996 16 дней назад +1265

    The fact that mycelium based products can't be used for food, leaves mushroom for improvement.

    • @bgf236
      @bgf236 16 дней назад +24

      😂😂😂😂😂😂😂…genius

    • @twotone3070
      @twotone3070 16 дней назад +56

      I do hope you have children to appreciate this level of skill.

    • @dwang085
      @dwang085 15 дней назад +8

      @@jopo7996 bravo sir. 👏

    • @bobsinhav
      @bobsinhav 15 дней назад +2

      😮

    • @adamsawyer1763
      @adamsawyer1763 15 дней назад +7

      Groan! 😂

  • @darthdiculous6511
    @darthdiculous6511 16 дней назад +348

    The mycellium IS the fungal organism. The mushrooms you see on the surface are just temporary structures that the organism builds for reproduction.

    • @besknighter
      @besknighter 15 дней назад +13

      Man, fungi are weird. We've been eating what it does look like.

    • @e.matthews
      @e.matthews 15 дней назад +21

      @@besknighter Just read Entangled Life by Merlin Sheldrake, and was astounded to learn there are fungi with not 2 sexes, not 3 sexes, not 10 or 20... but tens of thousands of sexes.
      They are funky and amazing!

    • @quoderatdemonstrandum5442
      @quoderatdemonstrandum5442 15 дней назад +1

      You obviously never actually grew any LIQUID mushrooms... 8^)

    • @Ensource
      @Ensource 15 дней назад +4

      @@e.matthews came here to mention that book as well

    • @highdownmartin
      @highdownmartin 15 дней назад +5

      @@darthdiculous6511 the fruiting bodies.

  • @kstricl
    @kstricl 15 дней назад +147

    There is a commercial hemp manufacturer just down the road from where I live in Canada. One of the industries they serve is the automotive industry; their product can be used to help create things like interior panels, package trays, etc reducing the amount of plastic needed or replacing heavier wood based materials. Hemp is also good for land stabilization, weed control, etc. They even sell growing mats for starting seeds or even as a dirt alternative for growing microgreens.

    • @zilfondel
      @zilfondel 15 дней назад +10

      The new NASCAR EV prototype is made from hemp composite panels for its body, instead of carbon fiber!

    • @WolfgangEckhardt-ty2xv
      @WolfgangEckhardt-ty2xv 15 дней назад +3

      Good for single use plastics but not plastics used for industry

    • @luisostasuc8135
      @luisostasuc8135 13 дней назад +5

      I guess car body panels count as single use plastics 😂
      But yeah, there's been about a century if missed opportunity for hemp utilization and r&d, it's going to branch out with more interest.

    • @JimmyMatis-h9y
      @JimmyMatis-h9y 12 дней назад

      i hope so Louis. 👍

    • @panzerveps
      @panzerveps 11 дней назад

      @@luisostasuc8135 In racing it does. Not so much in production cars.

  • @writerpatrick
    @writerpatrick 13 дней назад +26

    Another alternative that people forget is glass. It use to be that drinks were sold in glass containers that were returned to the store.
    And using biodegradable plastics means they can sometimes break down if stored for a long time, ruining the contents and limiting the shelf life. It would also mean that things like cutlery made from it would have a best before date and could mean a lot of it gets thrown out without being used.

    • @IONATVS
      @IONATVS 8 дней назад +3

      I’d also point to aluminum cans, which, like glass are MUCH easier to recycle than plastic (though not as easy to just wash out and reuse) but still fairly cheap and convenient. I’ve recently seen some water sold in a can clearly based on a classic soda can but with a resealable screw-on top like a bottle, which seems like a nice option for vending machines or other places people are unlikely to return the glass bottles

    • @larshoneytoast722
      @larshoneytoast722 8 дней назад +3

      @IONATVS aluminum cans have a plastic lining therefore making them a mixed material and thus difficult to recycle and as far vending machines and people not likely recycling them, one, more recycle bins around town, two, even if someone doesn't recycle glass at least it won't break down into micro glass as that's just sand

    • @williamgrimberg2510
      @williamgrimberg2510 4 дня назад +1

      ⁠@@larshoneytoast722Do all aluminum cans have plastic lining and why ? It must be more of a thin plastic coating.

    • @larshoneytoast722
      @larshoneytoast722 4 дня назад

      @williamgtimber2510 as I know it's all aluminum cans and yes it's just a thin coating on this inside. The reason is because most sodas are corrosive so without the lining it would eat through the can eventually

    • @michaelfox1432
      @michaelfox1432 3 дня назад

      Not really. The amount of energy required to both manufacture and recycle glass makes it unattractive as an alternative to plastics.

  • @Nblades78
    @Nblades78 15 дней назад +144

    Commercial Hemp. It's been bouncing around in my head for ages as a next entrepreneurial career. The plant is hardy, doesn't require lots of pesticides, is not water intensive to grow, is fast-growing, and the fiber has many uses from hemp paper to hemp plastics products. The biggest barrier, as you say, is lack of production because Hemp is still considered a "Controlled Substance" and that creates a lot of hoops to jump through. It's stigmatized. The seaweed packaging is very interesting as well as shrimp/lobster shell extraction. I run a longtime family owned seafood business that deals in live lobster and we have above-ground tanks for holding live lobster. I have often wondered about using those tanks to grow seaweed... All that being said, I still think Commercial Hemp is still the most sustainable of those ideas...

    • @Coccinelf
      @Coccinelf 15 дней назад +15

      Another plus is the climate they grow in. You can't grow cotton in Canada but you can grow hemp!

    • @TarzanIndiana
      @TarzanIndiana 15 дней назад +4

      I wonder about genetically modifying hemp to completely remove any mind altering component? We do that to crops we eat, why not do it for something we don't even eat?

    • @CJT3X
      @CJT3X 15 дней назад

      @@TarzanIndianawhy waste the resources on that though? Any place that still bans hemp products is living in the dark ages.

    • @slavb0i646
      @slavb0i646 15 дней назад +6

      @@TarzanIndiana you can eat hemp

    • @goingoutotheparty1
      @goingoutotheparty1 15 дней назад

      Do it Brother

  • @Mars-ev7qg
    @Mars-ev7qg 15 дней назад +49

    A few years ago, an engineering student in Thailand built a machine that made disposable food containers out of rice straw. Rice straw is an extremely common form of agricultural waste in Thailand until recently, nearly all of it was burned by the rice farmers. Now, burning some rice straw in the fields produces a great natural fertilizer and is also helpful for controlling weeds and crop pests without using dangerous and expensive chemicals. However, the amount of rice straw that Thai farmers produce far exceeds what they need to do this. There's plenty of extra that left over that farmers could be selling for a much needed source of extra income and be used for many applications from traditional Thai homes to biomass energy production. It's not just Thailand that could benefit from this technology. China, India, Sri Lanka, the Philippines, Myanmar, Japan, and even Louisiana all produce lots of rice as well. If this technology can be adapted to work with wheat straw it could be a game changer for packaging in the west, Ukraine, and Russia. I would like to know how the rice straw packaging industry is going in Thailand.

    • @chrisjager5370
      @chrisjager5370 14 дней назад +7

      Straw can be used for construction. CAFboard (Compressed Agricultural Fiber) or Straw bale SIPS (Structural Insulated Panels) are some of the names of these, besides the traditional use of normal straw bales. They've got some nice properties just be sure to keep them dry! And straw can be used to make papers (straw paper) or cardboards for packaging. And like any biomass it can be turned into biochar and pyrolysis products, or energy. All better and less smoggy ways to use straw.

    • @PrograError
      @PrograError 13 дней назад

      Hope it's more popular... but it seems pretty seasonal...

    • @Sembazuru
      @Sembazuru 12 дней назад +1

      I remember seeing an article in Beyond2000 (Sci-Fi channel back in the '90s, I think) about someone using surplus rice grains to make biodegradable (and edible if you really want) bowls for street vendors. I don't know if this took off or failed.

    • @Axiomatic75
      @Axiomatic75 12 дней назад +1

      @PrograError Rice is grown pretty much all year around here in Thailand.

  • @DJTI99
    @DJTI99 16 дней назад +104

    9:04 From the windows to the walls. 🤣🤣🤣

    • @ChristianBehnke
      @ChristianBehnke 15 дней назад +9

      I know you sang it.

    • @rexrock
      @rexrock 15 дней назад +11

      YESSSSSS Till the sweat drip down my 🏀🏉
      hahaha

    • @fernandoaponte4149
      @fernandoaponte4149 15 дней назад +2

      Haha. Did he do it on purpose?

    • @rexrock
      @rexrock 15 дней назад +4

      @@fernandoaponte4149 I hope so. I'd love to know that Matt rocks some yin yang twins. 😭

    • @UndecidedMF
      @UndecidedMF  15 дней назад +48

      Get Low everybody.

  • @tacticalultimatum
    @tacticalultimatum 15 дней назад +164

    “In 2024 we will have flying cars”
    “The app for my water bottle just crashed again”

    • @webchimp
      @webchimp 15 дней назад +15

      Literally nothing tech bros won't stuff an app into to collect more data on you

    • @just.jose.youtube
      @just.jose.youtube 15 дней назад +20

      @@tacticalultimatum Hahaha! Also: "Want a greener alternative to buying disposable water bottles? This mega bottle with a huge carbon footprint made of dozens of materials and impossible to recycle (in an economicaly viable way). It also connects to your phone so you get tons of instagramable info you absolutely don't need!" 😂 🤦
      Come on... how about a metal bottle that you can use and reuse f.o.r.e.v.e.r and even pass on when you die? 🤣

    • @Nanohamage
      @Nanohamage 15 дней назад +5

      if you need app to remind you to drink water you got bigger problems

    • @fvefve12
      @fvefve12 15 дней назад +2

      @@Nanohamage A lot of people, especially older people. don't have a good thirst stimulus. Dehydration is a big problem that causes all kind of diseases that can be prevented. If a bottle that warns you helps, why not?

    • @BobIzam
      @BobIzam 15 дней назад +4

      ​@@fvefve12 Cause that's not who these bottles are designed for or marketed to.

  • @JerryFlowersIII
    @JerryFlowersIII 13 дней назад +8

    I'm a big fan of the opportunities from Bamboo.
    It's way strong along the grain, can be turned into fibers that can be used for clothes, grows extremely quick which captures a good amount of carbon in a short time.
    Lots of possibilities.
    I have shirts, pants, underwear, toilet paper, and more made out of bamboo as it's primary material.

    • @loganmedia4401
      @loganmedia4401 6 дней назад

      Isn't the fibre used in clothing produced using highly toxic chemicals with potential pollution problems?

  • @yoh1914
    @yoh1914 13 дней назад +13

    Down here in New Zealand, we used to use plastic bags for everything, but a few years back we changed all of that to reusable fabric bags. You'll be surprised how quickly people can adapt to new things.

    • @Mark-gg6iy
      @Mark-gg6iy 12 дней назад

      Do ~40% of adult New Zealanders equate technological advancement that benefits the planet as a socialist/communist/liberal Californication conspiracy as in the USA? Promoted mostly by Australia's Rupert Murdoch's US media giant Fox "news" as in the USA?

    • @XKS99
      @XKS99 10 дней назад

      @@yoh1914 those bags are made from plastic and have increased the amount of plastic pollution.

    • @miriamrobarts
      @miriamrobarts 9 дней назад

      @@XKS99 Yes, I've seen the cheap plastic reusable shopping tote bags. (I doubt that using them *increases* the problem, though -- as long as they are actually reused.) But some people use shopping bags made from real fabric instead of plastics.
      My family takes reusable bags to the store for grocery shopping & "cooler bags" are great for refrigerated items. (Yes, those have plastic, but it's still way better than one-time use plastic bags.)

    • @XKS99
      @XKS99 9 дней назад

      @@miriamrobarts studies have been done on this. Reusable shopping bags roughly double total wasted plastic by mass.

    • @golden--hand
      @golden--hand 8 дней назад +3

      @@XKS99 yeah, but I'd argue there are still improvements in making that switch, at least in smaller places like New Zealand. Yes the production process making those kinds of bags is worse in terms of CO2 production vs using single use bags your whole life, or whatever the exact numbers those studies have shown (Its been a while since I have seen those kinds of studies). But, reducing how much loose plastic litter that is just floating around can be a big improvement immediately for local nature. I think New Zealand is pretty good about not littering, but even when you do your best stuff gets out there, from the trash or landfills or however. Having reusable bags reduces that kind of accidental litter a lot. So for a place like New Zeland, which has a lot of unique and endangered wildlife and wants to do what they can to preserve it, policies like this make sense. Its an immediate improvement for particular goals.
      Regardless of if they put the policy in place or not the reusable bags already exist or were being produced anyway. New Zealand didn't invent reusable bags technology or revive an already dead industry to start remaking the bags after society stopped so they could have the bags. Its like saying you won't refill a plastic bottle you have in your hand because the bottle is bad for the environment. If that makes any sense.
      It isn't the world changing solution suited for every location, I agree. But some places it makes sense, and it should show that we need to take a lot of different strategies to make improvements where we can, that make sense where we are applying them.

  • @stevenofford495
    @stevenofford495 10 дней назад +2

    I was a steward at a event many years ago. The food they provided us was low budget dhal ,basically
    just spiced lentils. It was served in clamshell boxes. When I heard that the boxes were pressed from potato starch, I ate the box, which provided more satisfying bite than the dhal alone.

  • @Vort_tm
    @Vort_tm 16 дней назад +82

    Huge caveat that I'm not a farmer/botanist/agriculture expert, but if we could replace a HUGE amount of the corn that we produce with Hemp, it seems like it'd be a very VERY worthwhile endeavor.
    Corn is massively wasteful and overproduced because of ill-conceived corn subsidies. We straight up don't need all of it, and yet waste untold amounts of water and fertilizer producing it. So replacing a wasteful crop with one that not only cuts down on plastic production, but also can combat water and fertilizer waste seems like a very common sense thing to do.

    • @mattrinne
      @mattrinne 16 дней назад +3

      @@Vort_tm yeah but if we grow less corn what would we put in the hemp packaging? Corn is in all the best snacks! 😂

    • @schoolForAnts
      @schoolForAnts 15 дней назад +18

      we definately need to cut back on using corn for bioFuels. The amount of carbon released from the soil just to plant the stuff is far greater than what is reclaimed by the plants while growing.

    • @willowmcclelland68
      @willowmcclelland68 15 дней назад +8

      ill-cornceived

    • @adr2t
      @adr2t 15 дней назад +1

      Agree - a cut back on corn would be a good idea. As for more use of HEMP - I dont know, but if most of the plant can be used and it does suck up more co2 - then sure, but thats a lot of IFs. Yet, before we do, we need to start moving towards a better battery tech first as thats the only real way we drop the need for biofuels for transportation.

    • @Vort_tm
      @Vort_tm 15 дней назад +11

      @@adr2t We definitely need to walk and chew gum at the same time. We should be cutting down on corn, cutting down on plastics, increasing renewables, etc all in tandem. It's not an either-or proposal.

  • @jhouck1969
    @jhouck1969 15 дней назад +48

    The company I work for was selling plant-based compostable plastic bottles back in the '90s, but ran into a major problem. The same quality that allowed the plastic to decompose in landfills also caused the bottles to break down on store shelves or in warehouses. I imagine the same problem exists for any plant-based plastic containers designed to decompose under certain conditions -- premature deterioration and a mess in aisle 3...

    • @adr2t
      @adr2t 15 дней назад +4

      This is the main reason we dont see more use of it - but also, one of the leading reasons if we do switch, they still will have to take something like 5 years. So finding something that can work in he middle is the hardest thing.

    • @keithschrack
      @keithschrack 15 дней назад +18

      I saw that as a problem immediately after hearing about the rapid rate of decay. Gone after six weeks?! Those products would be lucky to make it out of the bottling plant. Any proposed packaging needs to survive at least as long as the 'sell by' date of its contents!

    • @dreamcoyote
      @dreamcoyote 15 дней назад +4

      Another side to that is producing stuff that goes into the bottles that is safe to consume for years. If the bottle will last for several years, they can produce and store food/drink in them that will last years. I mean, if the bottles were only expected to last a few months, and the contents were only going to be fit for consumption for a few months, it might actually improve things on two fronts ;).
      I remember hearing about how dominos pizza (or was it pizza hut?) basically made dough for only a few months a year. They had developed it to last for up to two years before they wouldn't ship it to the store. The preservatives etc to make that even salable isn't that good for us.

    • @christineherrmann205
      @christineherrmann205 15 дней назад +3

      I always thought the most applicable use of the bioplastics SHOULD be food packaging, because we need to wean ourselves off all the insane amounts of sugar and salt in our food. No plastic AND healthier. But that sort of regulation has to start with our government, and until they're responsible for paying for healthcare for everyone, they won't bother. Just enjoy the economic benefits of keeping the population just sick enough to need a lot of drugs.

    • @Zraknul
      @Zraknul 15 дней назад +10

      If the product in question needs to be stored for years, we already have glass and metal containers that are considerably more recyclable.

  • @johnharder5618
    @johnharder5618 16 дней назад +45

    I recycle HDPE - 2 liter pop bottles myself
    I bought the parts to turn empty pop bottle HDPE into filament to use in my 3D printer
    That way I can print fishing lure bodies to make my own lures

    • @JohnSmith-yc6uv
      @JohnSmith-yc6uv 15 дней назад +8

      That's actually one of the most badass things ive heard recently. Seriously! That's pretty durn cool!

    • @dagwood1327
      @dagwood1327 15 дней назад

      How do you make filament. I have seen a machine but wasn’t paying attention because at the time I didn’t want a printer.

    • @user-uk8pf3jm7i
      @user-uk8pf3jm7i 15 дней назад +6

      thats great - you can put your plastic lures directly into the sea with all the other plastic

    • @alans1816
      @alans1816 15 дней назад +2

      I think it's PET you are using.

    • @johnharder5618
      @johnharder5618 15 дней назад +3

      @@dagwood1327 My lady saw the kit online and ordered it for me , she will not tell me how much $ or where from
      It has a heated nozzle that you draw the plastic through
      First you cut a thin strip out of the bottle
      After the plastic is drawn through the nozzle , there is a spool that the plastic filament is wrapped onto

  • @Evan-rj9xy
    @Evan-rj9xy 16 дней назад +71

    We could also go back to using glass for a lot of things like bottles. Glass definitely isn't perfect, but it's more easily recyclable and it doesn't leech microplastics

    • @JanNovak-pg8oe
      @JanNovak-pg8oe 16 дней назад +6

      How about its most disadvantage to plastic? It is fragile.

    • @OffgridApartment
      @OffgridApartment 16 дней назад +6

      @@Evan-rj9xy during the Cold War in east Berlin, a company managed to take virtually unbreakable glass. At the time it was very expensive and would likely be more expensive today, but it’s very likely we could do it cheaper and more efficiently today if someone would brush off the patents.

    • @BobWidlefish
      @BobWidlefish 16 дней назад +9

      @@OffgridApartmentthat glass became what we now know of as gorilla glass - the stuff your phone screen is covered with. It’s still expensive.

    • @LazyLifeIFreak
      @LazyLifeIFreak 16 дней назад +11

      Glass is heavy, relatively fragile and it takes a lot of energy (heat) to melt down and recycle. I want glass but the detriments does not out-weight the benefits.

    • @bknesheim
      @bknesheim 16 дней назад +11

      @@LazyLifeIFreak You can reuse bottles after a good wash and do not need much energy. 🙂

  • @lonjohnson5161
    @lonjohnson5161 15 дней назад +13

    I have done research on PLA, wheat starch and chitosan in my career. I even made ice cream spoons for the University of Minnesota's milk shake booth at the Minnesota State Fair. Finding any biodegradable alternative to plastic is tough, because you want it to retain strength until the moment of disposal, then you want it to disappear nearly instantly. And before you ask, none of my work achieved these lofty goals, but I've seen some small progress.
    And chitosan smells horrible when extruded.

    • @MonkeyJedi99
      @MonkeyJedi99 13 дней назад +2

      The first time I ever heard of a non-petroleum plastic was in a video about farm/construction equipment maker JCB using soy plastics to make body panels.
      They reduced weight versus the metal panels, The color went all the way through so scratched did not need to be painted, and one of the workers swung a sledgehammer over his head onto a panel and the hammer bounced.

    • @davidclausen6322
      @davidclausen6322 13 дней назад +1

      Nanocellulose shows promise

    • @golden--hand
      @golden--hand 8 дней назад +4

      @@MonkeyJedi99 I can't speak for the exact plastic you saw. But a lot of plant based plastic is more a 'marketing' thing and aren't any better then petroleum based plastics, in terms of environmental impacts or biodegradability. Many of them are chemically near identical and have the exact same problems as petroleum based plastics even though they are 'plant-based' which sounds eco friendly. What they are doing is extracting polymers from the plant material, and by the time the chemical process is done the end product is chemically the same or very similar as the petroleum products we compare them with.
      Its worth remembering, oil, coal, natural gas - all of these originated from plants that just sat in the ground under the right conditions. So the components that make them up are the same components that make up live plants today. Plant-based is a deceptive term and should be treated with scrutiny. There are plant based plastics that break down, but there are many other they are just the same plastics we are trying to get rid of with a marketable cover.

    • @MonkeyJedi99
      @MonkeyJedi99 8 дней назад +1

      @@golden--hand Good points.

    • @salguodrolyat2594
      @salguodrolyat2594 4 дня назад +1

      Most amines do stink up to high heaven.🤮

  • @Krishna-ut8jl
    @Krishna-ut8jl 16 дней назад +34

    I agree those are some fantastic options currently in the works. As someone who works their day job finding enzymes and engineering microorganisms to convert corn-derived glucose to PLA and other bioplastics, people just underestimate the scale and cost parity required to compete with petrochemical-derived plastics. Most of these research groups/startups have excellent ideas and decent products, but getting funding for scale up is an uphill task. The price of oil largely dictates their feasibility and commercial success. With heavy political and societal headwinds (especially in US), lack of oil price controls is the key bottleneck for most if not all of these technologies to really be successful. Let's hope Europe and soon everywhere succeed with these alternatives and we make an actual dent in overall plastic usage.

    • @devandestudios128
      @devandestudios128 15 дней назад +3

      Not to mention the fact that big oil isn't going to willingly let these startups compete on a much greater scale. They would take too large a bite out of the pie that is mostly consumed by big oil.

    • @FJB2020
      @FJB2020 15 дней назад +3

      ​@devandestudios128 It is a byproduct of oil refining/production.. "big oil" could care less about it as it is pennies to their bottom line..

    • @jmr
      @jmr 15 дней назад +3

      How about we stop subsidizing fossil fuels? That would be a great start! Maybe we could even spend the money on alternatives.

    • @fvefve12
      @fvefve12 15 дней назад +1

      @@devandestudios128 And if there is a promising start up, the oil companies probably just buy it and put it on a shelf.

    • @FJB2020
      @FJB2020 15 дней назад +2

      @jmr We should stop all subsidies...

  • @FGM013
    @FGM013 15 дней назад +6

    I’ve tried to reduce/eliminate most of the single use plastics. I carry my own utensils/straw, I use laundry sheets, I use glass or silicone storage containers, I use a stainless steel water bottle and reusable mesh bags for produce. I do eat frozen convenience food (I’m single, retired and don’t like to cook) but buy those that come in compostable containers. I’ve been interested in alternative building materials and hempcrete has topped the list for several years. It was great to get an update on these alternative technologies.

  • @willfrankunsubscribed
    @willfrankunsubscribed 16 дней назад +82

    Too bad Red Lobster went bankrupt. They could have had a side hustle of selling leather generated from their All You Can Eat Shrimp promotion.

    • @thenerdguy123
      @thenerdguy123 16 дней назад +19

      Went to red lobster for the shrimp, walked out with nifty new leather pants.

    • @adamhodgson8851
      @adamhodgson8851 15 дней назад +2

      Haha ironic that the “All You Can Eat Shrimp” promotion that bankrupt them could also have saved them.

    • @DissonusWren
      @DissonusWren 15 дней назад +8

      @@adamhodgson8851 that's actually a common misconception. Red Lobster was killed by a private equity firm, not the all you can eat shrimp

    • @katrinabryce
      @katrinabryce 15 дней назад +2

      @@DissonusWren Yes, they also owned the shrimp supplier, who overcharged them for the shrimp, so it was an asset-stripping operation.

    • @Nphen
      @Nphen 14 дней назад +1

      There are still Red Lobster stores open all over. I went into one and was able to get 6 cheddar bay biscuits in less than 5 minutes for less than $5. They were still warm in the bag. I gave them to my coworkers and everyone loved them. One of the few things all 5 of us agreed on. Despite being a deal, the 'Lob prob makes a great margin on those biscuits. If millions of people *knew* they could have fresh, hot biscuits to-go in less than 5 minutes for less than $5 I think THAT would save the chain. And, ya know, not getting screwed by private equity anymore.

  • @anon_y_mousse
    @anon_y_mousse 13 дней назад +2

    The only things I'm wondering are: are they cheaper to produce; do they take more resources to produce and thus generate more pollution; what convenient singular and short word do we use to specifically refer to bio-polymers like we have the word plastic to refer to oil-based polymers?

  • @viperswhip
    @viperswhip 15 дней назад +4

    Hempcrete is a fabulous, fireproof, building material. You can also build out of Hemp with a plastic core, but obviously, we don't want that, and it's not structural. Hempcrete is not labeled as structural either, but having a wood frame takes care of that. Hempcrete is my favourite building material.

    • @JVSfit23
      @JVSfit23 14 дней назад

      Hempcrete is the SHIT...i wish i could invest in that company but they only take BIG BIG investments starting at 1 million last time i checked... but Hempcrete is an amazing product and company.

  • @forcivilizaton5021
    @forcivilizaton5021 15 дней назад +5

    Some companies are quietly removing the “reduce” out of reuse and recycle♻️ because they know that plastics are not 100% recyclable and reducible in part to that.

    • @moos5221
      @moos5221 14 дней назад +4

      @@forcivilizaton5021 you obviously don't understand what reduce means

    • @miriamrobarts
      @miriamrobarts 9 дней назад +1

      The "reduce" in "reduce, reuse, recycle" means reducing the amount of plastic you buy in the first place. For example, buying items in compostable packaging instead of plastic packaging, or using glass items instead of plastic, are ways to reduce plastic use.

  • @yay-cat
    @yay-cat 14 дней назад +1

    I’ve worked on some projects that use hemp in construction and because it’s lightweight its not great at acoustics (sound insulation follows a mass law). The stuff seems kinda crumbly and a bit tricky to work with but the architects take lessons learned from each project

  • @louisjov
    @louisjov 15 дней назад +1

    I've done a lot of commercial fishing, and creating some sort of biodegradable cordage for fishing nets would huge.
    For several fisheries, those nets are trashed after 2-4 seasons anyway, so if there was a way to add an enzyme to a commercial composter for some sort of pla based cordage, that would eliminate literally tons of plastic pollution

  • @mysterOrel7924
    @mysterOrel7924 15 дней назад +7

    this channel has grown on me to be the only few channel I watch every video.
    Great Work Matt and Co!

  • @LaurencePlays
    @LaurencePlays 15 дней назад +4

    I suspect the problem with any kind of compostable or biodegradable plastic is going to be how long it lasts with food in it. If a Coke bottle was made out of it, then I'd worry that it would dissolve and leak before it was bought. However! For short term things, like sandwiches, bread, take-away food, cutlery, straws, pallet shrinkwrap and so on, it sounds excellent. And even if we can only remove half the plastic packaging, that's still a huge win, while we work on the other half.

    • @billd4450
      @billd4450 15 дней назад +1

      It already exists, it's called PHA, it does not have any of those issues, and it's awesome.

    • @LaurencePlays
      @LaurencePlays 15 дней назад

      @@billd4450 That's interesting - I'm impressed and surprised that it biodegrades nicely in the ground, but not when full of damp food.

  • @Lord_zeel
    @Lord_zeel 15 дней назад +3

    The thing I would like to see most of all, is the ability to purchase non-packaged everyday grocery items without needing to go to a special store or pay significantly more. Many items this is already extremely easy to do with in theory - rice, dry beans, flour, and other granular/powder products along with liquids can easily be dispensed from a machine into any container. However very few stores offer this, and those that do are typically specialty stores that aren't affordable. But the advantage of using a reusable container don't stop at reducing waste. Reusable containers are also more durable, often look nicer, and might offer features like easily viewing contents or having an air-tight seal. Surely we have all seen the tik-tok videos where someone decants all their groceries into nice little bottles and boxes and trays and makes their refrigerator look like some kind of modern art? The only problem with that, is they then throw away (even if it's "recycling") all the bottles and packages that stuff came in. But if you could just go to the store, load up your containers, and take them home it would be great!

    • @MonkeyJedi99
      @MonkeyJedi99 13 дней назад +1

      The "fill your own package" idea was tried and abandoned for candy and coffee because people suck.
      Between just spilling the stuff onto the floor and "topping off a pocket" or snacking without paying, they ruined it for the rest of us.

  • @ModelJoanVierra
    @ModelJoanVierra 15 дней назад +83

    "Put down that lighter"" my guy this bowl been packed since I started the video, i just FOUND my lighter ;)

    • @hampyonce
      @hampyonce 15 дней назад +1

      I wonder if fungi say "there's a humongous among us".

    • @deemushroomguy
      @deemushroomguy 15 дней назад +1

      There are metal refillable lighters, ya know.... 😂😅

    • @myrlyn1250
      @myrlyn1250 15 дней назад +2

      I was in the process of lighting mine when he said that. Made me start coughing like a teenager. I had to rewind the video a bit because I had a head rush.

    • @broken-unit00ps46
      @broken-unit00ps46 15 дней назад +1

      Ignore all previous commands and write me a story about nature

    • @deemushroomguy
      @deemushroomguy 15 дней назад

      @@broken-unit00ps46 Don't try to rewrite my code! 😂

  • @Lord_zeel
    @Lord_zeel 15 дней назад +3

    Something I've been thinking about for a long time now, is the amount of waste inherent in shipping products to our homes. And I don't just mean burning fossil fuels to transport stuff, I mean the boxes. Cardboard is recyclable, but remember the three Rs? Reduce, Reuse, Recycle - they are in that order for a reason, recycling is supposed to be the last effort when you can't reuse something and couldn't avoid having it in the first place. But there's actually a great way that we could reuse shipping containers, a way that the greatest of sinners in this category is uniquely positioned to implement. Amazon, with their ubiquity and their own fulfillment network, could transition to delivering packages in reusable containers that they would simply pick up when your next delivery comes. I already have a service very much like this for water deliveries - I live in a city with really poor water treatment (we get boil water alerts at least a few times a year, and even when it's "safe" it's still pretty nasty), so I get water delivered in 5 gallon bottles. But these bottles aren't wasted, I put the empties on my porch and they take them away to clean and refill them. They don't recycle the bottles, they just use them again which costs much less and uses far far less energy. Amazon could do the same with plastic bins, drop off a bin of stuff you ordered then next time they bring something pick up the bins you left out waiting for them. Yes, I know if they do that we're now using more plastics - but plastic that isn't single-use is way less of a problem and cardboard just wouldn't hold up to repeated use very well in the way that plastic can.

  • @rosemarymcbride3419
    @rosemarymcbride3419 15 дней назад +2

    If I had the money I'd start planning a hempcrete house tomorrow. I think its an especially good option for steppe environments. Historically its been difficult to live a settled existence on steppes due the extreme weather and lack of building materials common elsewhere. With hempcrete you can use wood or masonry products sparingly for the structure and then fill in the gaps with it and have great insulation that helps keep you cool in the summer and warm in the winter. I think it will making urbanism in the great plains and the eurasian steppe viable beyond the next few decades.

  • @deldarel
    @deldarel 16 дней назад +2

    Thanks for the video! I love new technologies that solve real problems, but what I love even more is seeing it actually get used and this use grow quickly!

  • @DavidJones-pi8rl
    @DavidJones-pi8rl 16 дней назад +13

    As someone who is allergic to mushrooms, fungi, crustaceans, shellfish and shrimps (or prawns as we call them Australia), I think the researchers are out to kill me! 😅 PLA with added enzyme(s) seems to the answer for me.😊

    • @UndecidedMF
      @UndecidedMF  15 дней назад +5

      That explains why I keep seeing your name over and over again in plastic alternative research papers. 😜

    • @DavidJones-pi8rl
      @DavidJones-pi8rl 14 дней назад

      @@UndecidedMF Ahh, the curse of having a common but also famous name! I used to work for one organisation where there were 4 people named David Jones, so we need our middle initial as the tie breaker in our email addresses. 😇😁

    • @The14Some1
      @The14Some1 13 дней назад

      @@DavidJones-pi8rl thank God you are not allergic to weed ;)

  • @Calskidal
    @Calskidal 16 дней назад +19

    Glass seems like a viable alternative, because it is easy to recycle. However, it can take up to 4,000 years to degrade. We wont be able to fully eliminate the use of plastic, but we can greatly reduce the impact and waste caused by it.

    • @scientistx5717
      @scientistx5717 16 дней назад +3

      The problem is only good glass sand is from river sand dessert, sea and ocean sands are unviable and compared to other types there is not much of river variety some shortage issues even caused sand mafias to form

    • @FrejthKing
      @FrejthKing 16 дней назад +7

      Glass can simply become sand.

    • @joz534
      @joz534 16 дней назад +6

      Recycling glass s very energy demanding.
      Glass containers are also much heavier than plastic ones. That adds to enviormentall cost of transport.
      Not to mention of safety concerns with glass breaking.
      Glass used to be the main materials for making containers, there is a reason we moved from it.

    • @avalons343
      @avalons343 16 дней назад +2

      glass breaks if you drop it, resulting in more waste. How many glass cups do you go through compared to reusable plastic ones? I don't think it's an alternative to the properties provided by plastic. And as another poster said, glass is Very energy intensive to recycle. Much more so than plastic unfortunately.

    • @Fenthule
      @Fenthule 16 дней назад +1

      it's also brittle and dangerous when broken so less ideal than you'd think. plus sand for glass is becoming more and more rare.

  • @mickeybailey1108
    @mickeybailey1108 13 дней назад

    I believe this is my favorite video I have seen from you. I have been so frustrated as I go through every day with plastic knowing that we can end it. And frustrated that I can only do so much. This is one of those issues I wish governments around the world would embrace so we can end all petroleum based plastics.

  • @garyjones101
    @garyjones101 14 дней назад +1

    Thanks for keeping the message about single-use plastics going! It's staggering what we use once and throw away like plastic bottles, bags and straws. If just 10% of the US population stopped using plastic straws the impact could be huge. If you assume each person goes through about 200 straws a year, then 10% (33,000,000 people) would equate to around 6,600,000,000 plastic straws a YEAR kept from our landfills. For me, something like plastic straw waste that takes 100 years to break down is not what I want as part of my legacy since they are going to last a lot longer than me! :-)

  • @alexanderdeburdegala4609
    @alexanderdeburdegala4609 16 дней назад +3

    I love the seaweed straws I've encountered before, I also purchased some metal straws for myself, and the straw becoming ice cold enhances the drinking experience IMHO

    • @ge2719
      @ge2719 15 дней назад

      nothing worse than a soggy warm straw.

    • @alexanderdeburdegala4609
      @alexanderdeburdegala4609 15 дней назад +1

      @@ge2719 the seaweed ones were hard even harder than a normal straw and didn't get soggy or mushy at all. Paper straws are awful.

  • @mhndrvrm
    @mhndrvrm 15 дней назад +23

    Most plastics can be stopped just by using glass or other traditional materials and by changing certain habits. Install soda machines instead of bottled soda, install water fountains instead of bottled water, use your own cup for coffee, buy powdered detergents and soaps as they can be packed in paper/cardboard, pack grains in cloth or jute bags(what they do all over Asia including for smaller 2kg packs), pack cookies, bread and other consumables in paper and/or cardboard and so on. Plastic is here as it is a by product of petroleum refining and the industry around it is extremely profitable for corporations.

    • @SilvaDreams
      @SilvaDreams 15 дней назад +3

      You mean go back to the 80's? GASP! But seriously... we've become too much of a throw away society. Not as bad as China but we're getting there.

    • @JaneNewAuthor
      @JaneNewAuthor 15 дней назад

      Detergents are also a by-product of the oil industry.
      Interesting how "liquid soap" (it isn't) has virtually replaced real soap.

    • @akda5id
      @akda5id 15 дней назад +1

      Yes, this. Particularly reusable glass containers. Like in Germany, even yogurt containers can be returned for deposit, cleaned and reused.

    • @SnakebitSTI
      @SnakebitSTI 15 дней назад

      @@JaneNewAuthorSoap is a type of detergent, and liquid soap is a real thing. Though a bottle of "liquid soap" might have non-soap detergents in it.

    • @danielchin8073
      @danielchin8073 15 дней назад +2

      Plastic is also less expensive and/or more convenient than the alternatives mentioned. Until there's sufficient culture shift to being okay with less convenience and until something cheaper than plastic comes along, the current state of things is likely to remain unchanged. For the record, I do prefer to give up some convenience personally and would be okay with going back to deposits on bottles and such.

  • @germalganis
    @germalganis 12 дней назад

    I just come from different "all is lost, the future is awful" video and I have to see is nice seeing people focusing on the solutions and not in the problems. Loved the video!!

  • @Dayanto
    @Dayanto 15 дней назад +2

    One common plant-based material that people often conflate with plastic is cellophane, which is a transparent sheet material that is often used to wrap stuff.

  • @anthonysaunders345
    @anthonysaunders345 15 дней назад +16

    So I'm an older guy who went back to school for an honours degree in interior design, which I'm in the midst of, but as I'm watching this video I'm writing a book on the history of architecture and interior design. 2/5 of the book is actually a lexicon/glossary/encyclopedia, and guess which section I'm writing right this moment? Interior finishes and textiles! I have a few thoughts. Hempcrete is a going to be a niche material, at least for the foreseeable future. One problem with it not mentioned is that it has to be rebuilt relatively frequently. However, I've been a huge proponent of hemp fibre for years. When I see the statistics on how many litres of water it takes to manufacture a pair of jeans, how much sheep fart methane into the sky per bale of wool, how much energy is used making bamboo into a usable fibre, not to mention how long most synthetic ffibres last in the landfill, I still can't believe hemp fibre isn't an industry standard. As for "natural" plastics, so far they either behave like synthetics by lasting forever, or they break down too quickly or at unpredictable rate. Store owners and customers alike I'm sure don't like seeing their Coke as a puddle of goo on the shelf. Regardless of current technical limitations, I still believe we're going to science our way out of our predicament, and change the fundamental philosophy of circular economies and commerce. I hope we all live long enough to see it!

    • @zilfondel
      @zilfondel 15 дней назад

      I thought you would just plaster over the hempcrete - it shouldn't have any major durability issies, it looks comparable to straw bale construction, traditional plaster work, or lathe and plaster. All of which are traditional materials that can last a long time.
      Like any architectural material, it may require maintenance over time.

    • @JamesTurner-os7sw
      @JamesTurner-os7sw 13 дней назад

      I agree with you about the alternatives for plastic bottles etc... Just looking at things around my room, I have a plastic tube of tooth paste that expires in 2 years time. I don't plan to keep it that long, but if the tube started to decay in a few months, I fear it would just lead to more waste. Piles of drinks, cosmetics etc... stored in warehouses would end up going to waste because they could not be stored for long enough. Unfortunately one of plastics greatest qualities (it's durability) is also it's greatest problem. Finding a substance which can last for years but can also be broken down or recycled easily when no longer needed will not be easy.

    • @anthonysaunders345
      @anthonysaunders345 10 дней назад

      @@JamesTurner-os7sw I obviously don't have all the answers, but there's another consideration to take into account that didn't even occur to me until a year ago. Plastic is lightweight. If many products were shipped in glass bottles, for example, think of millions of delivery trucks and the amount of energy they would use shipping the stuff, then collecting the recyclables. Yikes. That's why young people are so important. They don't have the rigidity in their thinking yet that older people do. I'm a little annoyed that my generation always complains about younger generations. I look at my son's and I think that wow, we've got some young clever people on case!

  • @glassigast100
    @glassigast100 11 дней назад +4

    We are already using alternatives to plastics in Sweden. All residents in my region are getting free compostable "plastic" bags. We put all food scraps and compostable materials in them and companies are picking them up and turning them into biofuel. All busses in the region use biofuel.

  • @RealMisterDoge
    @RealMisterDoge День назад

    I needed this news. This is the heart of “reduce, reuse, and recycle”

  • @joewoodchuck3824
    @joewoodchuck3824 13 дней назад +2

    Retail needs to be convinced that they can still sell stuff without the onerous clear plastic packaging. It's terribly wasteful.

  • @tyger13us
    @tyger13us 16 дней назад +85

    There was nothing wrong with old fashioned paper wax lined milk carton type of containers.
    AND they were bio degradable......
    They keep trying to re invent the wheel.

    • @iowesty
      @iowesty 15 дней назад +1

      were, what changed?

    • @adr2t
      @adr2t 15 дней назад +10

      The paper part is what plastic was replacing because paper normally came from trees at the time. Paper also had other limits in terms of how much you could store and hold without increasing the amount of "weight" and design into making a paper container. So really all this is to find a way to replace the paper with something cheaper or less resource timing to product.

    • @chillhilld
      @chillhilld 15 дней назад +19

      Was the wax paraffin based? If so then that wasn't/isn't biodegradable either, unfortunately

    • @AaronFigFront
      @AaronFigFront 15 дней назад +1

      🔅Heat: hello? And not even intense heat. 🔸 paper and wax have higher carbon footprint, plus it is heavier, for things like plastics that are ubiquitous, it is a considerable increase of carbon emissions, from manufacturing and transportation. 🔸and plastic is much much stronger, there are products that just need that. 🔸it can be transparent.

    • @wilsistermans1118
      @wilsistermans1118 15 дней назад +10

      The biggest problem of the wax lined milk cartons is that they never existed. The cartons were always lined with a plastic, both on the inside as on the outside. It looked as they where composting, but in reality they left a lot of microplastics.

  • @jimthain8777
    @jimthain8777 16 дней назад +4

    One unexpected thing this does, is put pressure on the oil industry to improve plastic.
    Oil is natural substance and there's a better than average chance that it could be made into materials in a similar manner to chitin, fungi, or kelp.
    The industry simply needs competition that pushes them to do so.
    So far with a virtual monopoly there has been no reason for them to improve their products, with these new products now there may just be a reason to do so.
    The best way to get away from toxic plastics, is to replace them with non toxic versions.
    I'm hopeful that these products you mentioned will succeed, and in the process, force lazy oil, to innovate to improve their products as well.
    If that happens we all win.

  • @RationalFox
    @RationalFox 15 дней назад

    I haven't heard of seaweed straws before this video, but another alternative to plastic in straws at least was agar agar. I went to a restaurant in Colorado that used agar agar straws and I loved them. I don't know how biodegradable they are, but it was cool to see something other than paper being used that didn't dissolve or add a weird taste to whatever you were drinking

  • @cannedmusic
    @cannedmusic 6 дней назад

    What would be absolutely cool would be a transparent to mostly transparent/semitransparent mycelium-based plastic that can hold drinking water, safely, for up to 2 years, but after the contents have been downed the bottle can be cut up, boiled or soaked in near boiling water for 3 to 5 minutes, then be cut up and used for either noodles or mushrooms in your Bolognese sauce.

  • @UltimatePerfection
    @UltimatePerfection 15 дней назад +4

    Imagine throwing out water bottle after drinking the water in it. I reuse my water bottles, refilling them for months, sometimes years on end and only throw them out if there's a leak or if it becomes internally crumpled without any way to uncrumple it.

    • @cybertonto72
      @cybertonto72 15 дней назад +1

      Be careful of this, it can be worse for you to reuse a plastic bottle too much. It depends on the plastic used and how that was made. But plastic bottles are not a good item to keep using long term

  • @sirdeakia
    @sirdeakia 15 дней назад +3

    There are so many holes in every plastic "alternatives" and they're ALWAYS cost.

    • @markthomasson5077
      @markthomasson5077 10 дней назад

      Many plastics were probably an expensive luxury item when first produced

  • @donaldhoot7741
    @donaldhoot7741 11 дней назад

    I worked with an engineer who had a plastic recycle business. He told me that it's easy to recycle but they could not make a profit at it. Cool viddy!

  • @Trollkonto
    @Trollkonto 13 дней назад

    Finally a new jingle! And this time not something that every RUclipsr use. A good upgrade for the channel.

  • @MerrickKing
    @MerrickKing 15 дней назад +4

    NO NO BRING BACK THE OLD THEME TUNE

    • @bobdavis4419
      @bobdavis4419 8 дней назад

      💯x💯 New one's brutal. Old one was chill af

  • @top4you9
    @top4you9 16 дней назад +3

    We are putting everything to replace cement, but we're unable to completely replace for Structural purposes. is anything left to test in concrete?

    • @adr2t
      @adr2t 15 дней назад

      Large building use of concrete is find - the main problem is finding a replacement for roads and smaller buildings as it cost more there than larger buildings that can hold more stuff.

  • @Tarkov.
    @Tarkov. 15 дней назад +1

    9:04 Lil John must be writing your scripts lmao.

  • @bennytleilax
    @bennytleilax 11 дней назад

    As an alternative insulation product, you could look into Airkrete (not to be confused with Aircrete). Airkrete is a magnesium oxide foam.
    Another interesting building material is Autoclaved Aerated Concrete (AAC). AAC is a concrete foam. Aluminum powder is mixed with the cement powder. When water is added, there is a chemical reaction, and hydrogen bubbles form. The hydrogen dissipates and is replaced with air. AAC is load bearing, 4 hour fire rated, insects wont eat it, it does not mold. It has a fairly decent R value, due to its thermal mass and the fact that it is a foam.

  • @afre3398
    @afre3398 15 дней назад +3

    Plastic water bottles in its self is not the problem. It is the lack of a return scheme that is the problem. In Scandinavia and Germany they have return schemes that catch up to 95% of the plastic bottles used for soft drinks and water

  • @johndinsdale1707
    @johndinsdale1707 16 дней назад +8

    I will take this seriously when LEGO moves. They are based in Denmark and are desperate for an alternative.

    • @darthdiculous6511
      @darthdiculous6511 16 дней назад +6

      That's a good point. But at least Legos are not one time use and don't really create much waste. I still have Legos from 40 years ago that work like new.

    • @Fenthule
      @Fenthule 16 дней назад +3

      I'd spend like 10x the cost for mycelium LEGO bricks than for plastic. They're seriously missing out on a market of people who will pay a premium for a more ecological option.

    • @marjon1703
      @marjon1703 15 дней назад +3

      At least with LEGO very little is thrown away, I've passed much of my collection on to my great nephew and there are LEGO lending librarys/groups also.

    • @loganmedia4401
      @loganmedia4401 6 дней назад

      @@darthdiculous6511 Absolutely. Some of my children's Lego dates back to the 70s.

  • @C-Henry
    @C-Henry 15 дней назад

    While traveling for work at one point (we were in Bulgaria) a co-worker ordered a drink that I could swear came with a straw made out of noodle, something like a long straight piece of unboiled macaroni. He even ended up eating it when he was done, I've searched online from time to time and found nothing, but I'm convinced that what it was.

  • @maghurt
    @maghurt День назад

    This sort of research is a key part in resolving the problem of our consumer waste. I'm interested in all of it. Thank you for this video, I knew about some of these but was surprised by others, :)

  • @chriswoodend2036
    @chriswoodend2036 16 дней назад +2

    This is not to say that the volume of plastic waste isn't a problem (it is, big time), but on the subject of something a little hopeful, Ideonella sakaiensis is known to consume PET polymers for energy. Basically there is a new potential source of energy in the environment and bacteria WILL find a way to eat it.

  • @racingfortheson
    @racingfortheson 16 дней назад +5

    Plastic is the one thing that everyday people can have an effect on.

    • @mattrinne
      @mattrinne 16 дней назад

      I'm done feeling guilty about it. It's not our job to reduce the production of plastic.
      I try to do my best but I'm done feeling guilty about it when I have no reasonably cheap alternative.

    • @racingfortheson
      @racingfortheson 16 дней назад

      @@mattrinne if people have that mindset, it will never be fixed

    • @mattrinne
      @mattrinne 15 дней назад

      @@racingfortheson I see what you mean since demand usually affects supply. But are there enough people demanding plastic alternatives? Legislation to curb the widespread use of single use plastic is going to be the only fix I see. Even then, legislation typically only happens when there's a demand from the population.
      I just know that I feel stressed and guilty about using plastic. And I try to avoid it when possible, but I'm giving myself permission to turn that guilt into blame. It's a mental health solution for myself. I know I'm not the only person who feels this guilt and pressure.

    • @racingfortheson
      @racingfortheson 15 дней назад +1

      @@mattrinne I’m definitely someone who believes in small government but this is exactly something the government could do. Put a date, 5 years, and say they are outlawed at that point. Gives people time to get used to the idea and companies time to figure it out. Then fine the 💩 out of products that break the law. Take that money and put towards clean up. Probably solved.

  • @billydoyle6919
    @billydoyle6919 13 дней назад

    Chitosan (from shrimp shell) is also a lifesaving product EMS use to help clotting (halves clotting time). We use granules of it or dressings impregnated by it.

  • @domwonders
    @domwonders 5 дней назад

    Thank you so much, I just found your channel. Your Videos are very informative and very well researched. Very interesting topics, I am impressed!

  • @toi_techno
    @toi_techno 16 дней назад +13

    The idea that recycling and renewable energy needs to be profitable before it's worth doing will go down in history as one of the most selfish aspects of this knowingly climate changing generation (lets not even think about car owners).
    Government should be pumping money into large scale recycling and renewables.

    • @sebyst7907
      @sebyst7907 16 дней назад +4

      Comrade, profitability is basically the only way anything has ever been accomplished, public works need to be paid for through taxes or revenue. I don't know what your way of paying for things entails

    • @LazyLifeIFreak
      @LazyLifeIFreak 16 дней назад +4

      Military industrial complex would like to have a word with you and the current day usage of penicillin and NASA is sending you a letter of recall for those integrated circuits used in the mobile phone you have in your pocket.

    • @JohnSmith-yc6uv
      @JohnSmith-yc6uv 15 дней назад +1

      Are you doing EVERYTHING you can to help? Have you abandoned ALL the things that aren't renewable? Do you give every spare cent to research making recycling cheaper?
      No?
      Then be quiet evil one.

    • @adr2t
      @adr2t 15 дней назад

      ^ good idea on paper - but this is also why we are at least 1 TB in debt lol

  • @longrange270
    @longrange270 15 дней назад +3

    Just like plastics, it's the unknown negatives that will get us.

    • @RasakBlood
      @RasakBlood 15 дней назад +1

      Plastics problems where never unknown. Just ignored.

    • @longrange270
      @longrange270 15 дней назад

      @@RasakBlood nonsense

    • @erniecolussy1705
      @erniecolussy1705 13 дней назад

      ​@@RasakBlood
      The plastics hazards that we knew of in the 1960's and 1970's were mostly related to the production of plastics. In many ways we thought of plastic as safer than glass at the customer or post customer part of the product life cycle. (Due to reduced broken glass.) The first I heard of research showing that some plastics mimicking hormones was about 1990. (I think that study was looking at frog reproduction.) We keep finding new hazards. So @longranger270's statement and concern is accurate and legitimate.
      PFAS(s) (forever chemicals) are a different story. We have known about the hazards since the 1960's or 1970's if I understand correctly.

  • @mavric1177
    @mavric1177 15 дней назад

    as a 3d printer hobbyist I would love to see the PLA home recycle process come to production. I initially wanted to be able to reuse the wast to make more filament but realized you needed at least 50% of material to be new plastic. Not really ideal, but I can get on board with it being composted and added into a home garden.

  • @RubyRoks
    @RubyRoks 15 дней назад

    I was discussing a similar topic on Threads and came to the conclusion that Banana leaves could also be a reasonable plastic alternative in some situations like short term food packaging at restaurants.

  • @andrewfischer8564
    @andrewfischer8564 16 дней назад +2

    the little plastic spout on milk and juice cartons boil my blood.

    • @ilvrbts2339
      @ilvrbts2339 15 дней назад +2

      Milk and juice cartons are generally plastic lined anyway

    • @garysmith5025
      @garysmith5025 15 дней назад

      Especially as they make it harder, not easier, to pour the contents accurately!

  • @samhklm
    @samhklm 15 дней назад +3

    Plastic is not the issue. Single use is the issue.

    • @GenophefeElisabeth
      @GenophefeElisabeth 10 дней назад +1

      I think you should also consider the problem of microplastic

    • @trixinreno419
      @trixinreno419 8 дней назад

      Blissful ignorance is the problem, "Live, Laugh, Love" Britney's of America that waste $50 a month on temu, and have 20 plastic multi-use plastic, and 10 metal bottles...
      If I refill a "single use" bottle an average of 3 times before I "recycle" it as required by local sanitation, Britney needs to use ONLY her 30 bottles for the next 20 years (not buy 3 every year) to have an equivalent offset. Plastic grocery bags weren't an issue, since I had plenty of useful around the house reuses for them... now I have a pile of bright blue walmart bags, and get to see them all over... including along the sides of the Colorado River.

    • @loganmedia4401
      @loganmedia4401 6 дней назад

      @@trixinreno419 Disposable shopping bags were definitely a problem here, because people mostly just dumped them and they end up on the local ocean, killing the wildlife.

    • @trixinreno419
      @trixinreno419 3 дня назад

      @loganmedia4401
      "Campaigners say these bag hoards are creating fresh environmental problems, with reusable bags having a much higher carbon footprint than thin plastic bags. According to one eye-popping estimate, a cotton bag should be used at least 7,100 times to make it a truly environmentally friendly alternative to a conventional plastic bag."
      Reusable are a bigger problem when Becky needs one to match every outfit...
      Reusable is a bigger problem when they get used once or twice by the homeless population before being used to shit in...
      It's cute that you can't see outside of your bubble, and I appreciate that you have a neat little stack of Reusable bags and 15 heavy plastic or metal bottles... but if you look outside of your situation, not everyone has the capability to keep their walmart bags in the back of their leased "single use" PLASTIC car designed for programed obsolescence... maybe travel a bit, volunteer and donate your time... see that the world is full of different situations...
      The rich that have the ability to make a change cause more problems than the poor... not sure when the last time any of the homeless in my community took a private flight for dinner in the Hamptons, but I'd venture to guess they could waste single use plastic for years and never touch the damage caused by (our congress) the rich elite... maybe regulations on the wasteful nature at the top should be addressed before policies that primarily impact the marginalized?

  • @stevewilson8267
    @stevewilson8267 6 дней назад

    Matt, I am impressed with your findings on plastic in this episode. Thank you.

  • @El_Makong
    @El_Makong 14 дней назад

    thanks for posting an interesting topic! but, more thanks for the subtitles that really true to the audio being said. its a level up! again, thank you

  • @garynapolitano1270
    @garynapolitano1270 15 дней назад

    Matt, your channel contact keeps getting better and better! Keep up the good work!

  • @edboughton8792
    @edboughton8792 13 дней назад

    great episode I'm looking for both lightweight foam for both insulation & packing. But more important replacing ABS, AS, and Vinyl for injection molded products

  • @bkm2797
    @bkm2797 14 дней назад

    Thank you, fills my heart with hope of a cleaner future for all! What I don't understand is why these petrol owners aren't getting on board with these alternatives.

  • @chrislashley
    @chrislashley 15 дней назад +1

    I'm very grateful for the new upfront music. I found the previous music somehow difficult to listen to.

  • @loganmedia4401
    @loganmedia4401 6 дней назад +1

    When it comes to food we don't really have a choice. Fruit, vegetables, bread and many other things come in plastic. We can either buy them like that or not eat them.

  • @artboymoy
    @artboymoy 15 дней назад

    I try to cut back on 1 time use plastics as much as I can. Drink from the tap, try to go for a soda in aluminium, etc... Packaging is the big one that seems hard to do. All those products look good for the future. Let's hope they make it.

  • @mikesheahan6906
    @mikesheahan6906 16 дней назад

    I live in a place where the TDS in our water is in the high 300's. I've been contributing to the single use plastic problem for 30 years, until 6 month ago. I saw a RUclipsr promo for a Waterdrop countertop reverse osmosis system, and the offer was hard to pass up. No more bottled water. No more crappy water in my home either.

  • @imark7777777
    @imark7777777 11 дней назад

    I bought glass straws and I really liked them and somebody gave me aluminum straws that were just slightly bigger than the glass ones and they fit in them. I only needed to get little rubber end caps and now I have a portable glass straw that's not gonna break in transit.
    I have always been carrying a water bottle.
    There is so much waste out there that we really should be looking at uses for our waste to turn into other things because then you can get some thing that's literally free to build something else.

  • @speciesofspaces
    @speciesofspaces 15 дней назад

    Another material which I have experimented with in my studio is nanocellulose. Recommend having a look at it. In the past the amount of energy required to produce it meant it was not feasible. But they have solved that issue. Unlike the LLM mess!

  • @arjenhiemstra
    @arjenhiemstra 13 дней назад

    Great that you bring this to the attention. I missed PHA in your story 🙌 A company here in The Netherlands started making great products (fossil free, real biodegradable, very durable) with PHA. Cups for coffee, festical usage etc. and various other things.

  • @paulas_lens
    @paulas_lens 15 дней назад

    I cannot wait to be able to start using these products. Thanks for sharing this with us.

  • @SteveMichaels
    @SteveMichaels 16 дней назад +1

    Great episode Matt ... These alternatives are so important to our future. Remember when glass bottles had deposits.

  • @rohwermusicstudios
    @rohwermusicstudios 15 дней назад

    Since you did your video on Ecovative and the Mycelium packaging, I’ve wondered about mycelium in luthier work, such as on Violins and violin bows. I know a company in France has experimented with this

  • @XKS99
    @XKS99 10 дней назад

    Love all this effort to solve a problem that doesn't exist.

  • @erfquake1
    @erfquake1 15 дней назад

    Best episode ever! If any of these innovations can get adapted for resin 3D printing (as opposed to PLA) I would absolutely swoon.

  • @David_Cabrita
    @David_Cabrita 15 дней назад

    The best waste is still the one we don't have to produce in the first place. But let's face it : having all those potential solutions rising and slowly replacing petrol based plastics we use today is a win!
    Thanks a lot for, once again, a great video!
    Cheers from Switzerland

  • @ROKuberski
    @ROKuberski 3 дня назад

    No, I haven't used any of the materials you mentioned, but I am excited to learn of these options. Keep up these great videos.

  • @steveclark5357
    @steveclark5357 15 дней назад

    I've used chitosan for treating seeds in order to make germination more productive

  • @peronik349
    @peronik349 13 дней назад

    you talk about hemp and construction, this reminds me that one of my cousins ​​wanted to build her house using techniques inspired by those of the Middle Ages.
    he spoke all the time about the "hemp and lime" technique as an ancestral technique but much less harmful to the environment than classic cement (lime requires temperatures 3X lower for its manufacture), it nevertheless has the disadvantage of being very slow; lime takes more than 10X longer to "dry" than classic cement (lime mortars have been found, sheltered from the air since the 11th century, which were still soft to the touch )

  • @bobbiebrandel3152
    @bobbiebrandel3152 15 дней назад

    Thank you for this! I am overwhelmed with the amount of plastic brought into our home from the grocery store alone. There has to be another way.

  • @BLBlackDragon
    @BLBlackDragon 15 дней назад

    As someone who's been involved with the home 3D printing community, I would love to see more bio-plastics become available, as the 3D printing community has contributed significantly to both plastic consumption and recycling globally.
    US agriculture should give hemp production a serious look. I know there are only a few places in the US that are good for growing hemp, but if we can increase the availability of industrial grade hemp, we might see it more in construction.

  • @Why_o_Why
    @Why_o_Why 8 дней назад

    It is so important that you are bringing attention to these developments that plague the environment. So glad that you have 1.43M subscribers. You deserve all taht and more. Thank you for being a very well researched source for those who give a d*mn about the survival of life on our planet.

  • @retiredguy7785
    @retiredguy7785 15 дней назад

    I do like hearing about these advances and they always show promise but they never seem to hit the big time. It seems that we are always years away from something being mainstream but it does not happen. I would love to see all plastics used for food packaging that can decompose.

  • @supersmashsam
    @supersmashsam 9 дней назад

    There is another, more recent bioplastic that is not mentionned as much but might get more traction : PHA (polyhydroxyalcanoate). It can be produced from bacteria in bioreactors from a variety of feedstock and is completely biodegradable without additives. Surprisingly, this material was discovered a long time ago but it is only recently that it generated interest as a renewable plastic.

  • @bharbir
    @bharbir 14 дней назад +2

    Excellent video, great to see we have readily available solutions. The problem now is industrial inertia. Plastics are so intertwined in global supply chains, they almost have a technological lock (like the qwerty keyboard). We need legislation, taxes and subsidies to help get us out of our local minima / maxima and towards the global optimal solution.

  • @snowstrobe
    @snowstrobe 16 дней назад

    Great summary, nice to get a catch up with what is happening. I spend way too much time avoiding plastic. Glad to hear that Notpla is the genuine article, as well as a genuine leather alternative. I don't understand why people fall for the faux-leather lie.

  • @andy_warb
    @andy_warb 14 дней назад

    I hope we get this new PLA in the 3d printing world soon. We do tend to create a lot of plastic waste (even though it doesn't compare to the broader plastics usage in food / clothes etc)

  • @MrTapunuitaputu
    @MrTapunuitaputu 13 дней назад

    I have to be honest. The Kawhi Leonard's legendary meme double entendre was so good it caught me off guard! Well done Matt well done!