| Growing urbanization is leading to lifestyles that are getting faster and busier, ultimately leading to more ready-to-eat meals, pre-cut meats, fruits and vegetables, single serve beverages and snacks. This has led to increasing innovations and advancements in food packing technology that is easy to open, dispense, handle, consume, reseal. However growing environmental concerns and government legislations are leading to more sustainable and biodegradable packaging alternatives. A sustainable alternative to  plastic food packaging using washed-up seagrass has been  created by Royal College of Art graduate  Felix Pöttinger. The dried seagrass fibre is bound  together using a cellulose-based extract from the plant. Once mixed, the  seagrass is pressed into a metal mould and baked until completely dry. The  German designer, who created the POC packaging as part of his Design Products  masters, claims the material is not only completely biodegradable but has  antibacterial properties that help keep dry food fresh. He hopes POC will reduce both food and  plastic packaging waste. He says, "It's a natural waste material, and past  research showed that it is highly resistant against mould. I am only using the  dead seagrass fibres that appear on the beaches of the Mediterranean coast, so  there is no industrial harvesting process to harm the population of the  seagrass or any living being." Bio-Lutions produces biodegradable packaging and  disposable tableware from plant waste, for instance bananas, pineapples or  tomatoes. First the plants are dried and then mechanically pulped into micro-  or nanofibers. When these fibers are mixed with water, it can be processed in  various forms without the need for additional chemical binders. It can be  shaped into packaging and disposables. This method, developed by Bio-Lutions,  has only been tested in a pilot. In Bangalore, in the Indian state of  Karnataka, a major industrial plant will be built for the almost CO2-neutral  production of packaging and disposables. The Bangalore region is very fertile  and achieves four harvests per year. This means abundant plant waste so  additional production of plants is not necessary. Bio-Lutions will work  together with cooperatives of small farmers who supply the material for the  production and so generate additional income.  An Indian online supermarket  is already a customer. Bio-Lutions aims to offer its products in Europe within  a few years. “After a constructive and accurate review, without bureaucracy, of  our business plan and innovation, we are now supported by DEG in the Up-Scaling  program,” says Eduardo Gordillo, Managing Director of Bio-Lutions. With the  Up-Scaling program DEG promotes start-up investments in small and medium-sized  enterprises (SMEs). This way enterprises can expand their innovative business  models, especially models that generate positive effects on development.  Together DEG and the German Federal Ministry for Economic Cooperation and  Development will provide 4.5 million Euros for the program in 2017. | 
Previous Article
Next Article
{{comment.DateTimeStampDisplay}}
{{comment.Comments}}