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Posted: 2022-11-03 04:42:43

Most certified "home-compostable" plastics do not fully break down in home compost bins, a UK citizen science project has found.

The project also showed that while 85 per cent of people surveyed were "enthusiastic" about buying compostable packaging, many were confused by what "compostable" meant.

The study was published in Frontiers in Sustainability.

Danielle Purkiss from University College London, who ran the study, said even when people correctly identified certified home-compostable plastic and placed it in their home composter, most of those plastics remained in large fragments after a year, and many lingered as microplastics.

Some barely broke down at all.

"We have photos [of home compost-certified plastic] that people have submitted after 12 months where you can still read the home compost certification label on it, which is ironic," Ms Purkiss said.

"There were plastic bags that were still so intact you'd probably be able to hold your shopping in them."

Plastic not so fantastic

The world's appetite for plastic has increased dramatically in the past couple of decades. Since the turn of the millennium, global plastics production — and ensuing waste — doubled.

Around half of the 353 million tonnes of plastic waste generated in 2019 ended up in landfill, while just under a quarter was "mismanaged", meaning it was burned in open pits or ended up in waterways, oceans or dumped on land.

And while plastics that make their way into the environment do eventually break down, the process can take hundreds of years, and involves them first eroding into microplastics that permeate every corner of the globe.

In an attempt to tackle plastic pollution, many countries, including Australia, are phasing out single-use plastics and replacing them with recyclable, reusable or compostable options.

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Ban on single-use plastic items set to come into effect

Compostable plastics generally come in two types: industrial and home compostable.

Industrial compostable plastics, which in Australia meet requirements of Australian Standard AS 4736–2006, need the hot, controlled conditions of a commercial facility to fully biodegrade.

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