Skip to main content

Seaweed in packaging.


Your fast food burger could soon come wrapped in seaweed.Burgers, fries, and nuggets can be a delicious treat. But the environmental impact of their packaging might leave a bad taste in your mouth.These products often come wrapped in oil-proof plastic.Not only does this packaging contribute to plastic pollution, but it is often coated with environmentally damaging chemicals like polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFASs) to stop your treat from sticking.These industrially-produced chemicals can accumulate in the environment and in human bodies.In the UK alone, consumers generate 11 billion items of packaging waste a year.Luckily a new breakthrough has brought scientists one step closer to a sustainable alternative -seaweed.How would seaweed fast food packaging work?Researchers from Flinders University in Australia have partnered with a German biomaterials developer to create a seaweed based biopolymer.It is as recyclable as paper, explains Dr Zhongfan Jia, a lead researcher from the Flinders Institute for Nanoscale Science and Technology.“The seaweed extracts have a similar structure to the natural fibres from which paper is made,” says Dr Jia.“Our novel specialist treatments boost the grease-resistance feature of the seaweed via simple modifications while not affecting biodegradability nor recyclability of the coated paper.”The seaweed is native to the South Australian coastline. Now, one * five - a German biomaterials company - is seeking to scale production up from the laboratory to the factory.The product could be great news for the environment, says Claire Gusko, the company’s co-founder.“We are able to reduce harmful plastic pollution with this product, and we are also using feedstock that is environmentally regenerative,” she says.“Seaweed cultivation helps to naturally rehabilitate marine environments, reduce greenhouse gases, and mitigate coastal erosion.“It’s important for us to use sustainable  inputs upstream to ensure our products are environmentally safe, from cradle to grave.”

From euronews.com by Charlotte Elton

www.sba.tax

Comments

  1. This is wonderful news! We sure need better packaging for everything, not just fast food. I hope they start mass producing this within a year.

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Cloud Bookkeeping

US FED rate rise.

  The US Federal Reserve officials have indicated that they plan to resume increasing interest rates to control inflation in the world's biggest economy. During the June meeting, the Federal Open Market Committee reached a consensus to keep interest rates stable for the time being to evaluate whether further tightening of policy would be necessary. However, the majority of the committee anticipates that additional rate increases will be required in the future. The minutes of the meeting have recently been made public. According to the minutes, most participants believed maintaining the federal funds rate at 5 to 5.25 per cent was appropriate or acceptable, despite some individuals wanting to raise the acceleration due to slow progress in cooling inflation. Although Fed forecasts predicted a mild recession starting later in the year, policymakers faced challenges in interpreting data that showed a tight job market and only slight improvements in inflation. Additionally, officials gr...

EU business slide.

  S&P Global’s flash eurozone composite purchasing managers’ index, a key gauge of business conditions for the manufacturing and services sector, fell 1 point to 47.1, figures showed yesterday. That is its lowest level since November 2020 and the fourth consecutive month below the crucial 50 mark separating growth from contraction. One of the few bright spots in the survey was that companies in all sectors reported a slight easing of cost pressures, price growth and supply chain constraints. However, prices charged for goods and services still rose at the sixth fastest rate since such data started in 2002. Jobs growth increased marginally from October but remained low compared with the past 18 months. Following a few months of falling price pressure in manufacturing and services, the October print shows an overall stabilisation said Jens Eisenschmidt, chief European economist at Morgan Stanley. However, German businesses, at the hub of Europe’s energy crisis, reported that manu...

Tariffs on UK electric cars.

  The European Commission has confirmed that it will continue with its plan to impose tariffs on electric cars exported between the UK and EU starting next year. This is due to the "rules of origin" requirement that mandates EVs traded across the English Channel to have 60% of their battery and 45% of their parts sourced from the EU or UK or face a 10% tariff. A senior Commission official, Richard Szostak, recently informed parliamentarians from the UK and EU that the bloc's battery investment has significantly declined, making the tariffs necessary to encourage domestic production. In 2022, the EU's share of global investment in battery production shrank from 41% to only 2% after the US offered substantial subsidies through its Inflation Reduction Act. Starting in 2024, car manufacturers in the UK will need to have 22% of their sales come from zero-emission vehicles, which means they may need to import EVs from the continent to meet this requirement. If EU carmakers ...