 | Braskem ethylene bags labeled "I'm green". Credit: Courtesy of Braskem | Report Biopolymers and the Dream of a Green Petrochemical Industry By Fabiana Frayssinet
Plastics made from sugarcane ethanol may be more
environmentally friendly than their fossil fuel
counterparts because of their lower carbon
footprint, but they are no more biodegradable than
traditional plastics.
RIO DE JANEIRO, Aug 13 (Tierramérica).- Brazil leads global production of biopolymers, an
industry that generates fewer greenhouse gas
emissions than fossil fuel-based plastic
manufacture. But "green plastics" made from
sugarcane have a sour aftertaste.
The leap to industrial-scale production of green
polyethylene was made by a factory established two
years ago in the Polo Petroquímico do Sul
(Southern Petrochemical Hub), located in the
Triunfo municipality of the southern state of Rio
Grande do Sul, with an annual output capacity of
200,000 tons.
Green plastic is a thermoplastic resin made from
the country's abundant sugarcane-derived ethanol
and produced with technology developed by the
Brazilian company Braskem, one of the largest
petrochemical producers in the world.
Braskem - whose production is still primarily
based on oil - claims that green polyethylene has
the same properties as its petrochemical relative,
but that the difference between the two is their
environmental impact.
"Up to 2.5 tons of carbon dioxide are captured and
stored per ton of green plastic produced," Marcelo
Nunes, renewable chemicals director at Braskem,
told Tierramérica.
This material also has great versatility for
applications in a range of industries, including
hygiene and cleaning, food, cosmetics, and
automobiles.
"It's made from sugarcane, a raw material that's
100 percent renewable," he added.
Braskem assures that with the production of this
polyethylene and other sustainable products in the
same line it is contributing to reducing carbon
dioxide by more than 750,000 tons a year, or the
equivalent to planting and maintaining more than
five million trees a year.
The next step for the company will be to build its
first green polypropylene plant and launch
production in 2013.
Green polypropylene - which in its petrochemical
version is the second most widely used
thermoplastic resin in the world - will also be
made from ethanol and will have much the same
environmental advantages as polyethylene, Nunes
said.
The volume of green plastic produced is marginal
compared to conventional resins. But, according to
Nunes, it is very important for Braskem, whose
"goal is to become a global leader in sustainable
chemical production by 2020."
According to environmentalist José Goldemberg, a
professor at the Electrotechnical and Energy
Institute of the University of São Paulo, green
plastics are a good investment as they are a
substitute for basic raw materials from the
petrochemical industry, such as naphtha (benzene
or petroleum ether).
Naphtha is the leading input in the petrochemical
industry and accounts for almost 50 percent of
global ethylene production, although in some
regions, such as the Middle East and North
America, gas is more widely used.
"Using sugarcane as a substitute for products made
from naphtha is a major step in the road to
sustainability," Goldemberg told Tierramérica.
In his 2009 article "Polietileno verde, um sinal
positivo" (Green Polyethylene, a Positive Sign),
Eduardo Athayde, director of Worldwatch Institute-
Brazil, agreed, noting that this plastic produced
with Brazilian technology set the stage for "the
petrochemical industry to start operating under
the new rules of a low carbon economy."
"While it's not biodegradable yet - because the
product obtained using renewable ethanol as a
substitute for fossil fuels is exactly the same as
a petrochemical-based polymer - it is a step
forward in line with greenhouse gas reduction
recommendations," he added.
Compared to crude oil, sugarcane has not had an
impact yet on the petrochemical industry.
But "in time there will be a need to find a
substitute for oil and natural gas in polymer
production. The sooner the better," Roberto
Kishinami, expert on climate change and
sustainable use of natural resources, told
Tierramérica.
A consultant for organizations such as the
Democracy and Sustainability Institute and
ActionAid, Kishinami fears that the massive use of
sugarcane for fuel or petrochemical production
will favor extensive monoculture of this crop.
Nunes disagrees. "Only 0.02 percent of the
country's arable lands are planted with sugarcane
crops for green plastic manufacture. Moreover,
this production does not affect food crops, as is
the case with some corn-based plastics, for
example."
But Luiz Jacques Saldanha, an agricultural
engineer and environmental activist from Rio
Grande do Sul, says that "calling this process
green just because its source of carbon comes from
a plant is highly misleading."
"It changes food production, with another
commodity joining soybeans in furthering huge
monoculture plantations, the greatest tragedy of
the 21st century in terms of global productive
land use," he added.
For Saldanha, biopolymers are another form of
greenwashing, a term used to describe new
marketing practices aimed at highlighting a
product's alleged environmental benefits.
He argues that the source of carbon - whether oil,
coal, ethanol or any other source - does not "make
these molecules green."
"They can't be considered green because they are
not biodegradable, so they remain in the
environment for a long time, polluting
ecosystems," he said.
He also questions the plasticizer used in the
process of industrialization of green polyethylene
and polypropylene.
"As monomers, these are still considered the least
problematic resins. But, like all resins used in
the production of consumer goods, they contain
plasticizers such as bisphenol A," which is a
contaminating additive.
Green plastics, like any plastics, "must be
recycled and never released into the environment,"
he cautioned.
Only time will tell if the effect of green
plastics on the environment will leave a sweet or
sour aftertaste. But that is only if sugarcane
does become the star raw material of Brazil's
petrochemical industry. Right now, the "sugar-
chemical" industry is still a distant dream. * |