Can Indian Seaweed Replace Plastic? | World Wide Waste | Insider Business
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- Опубліковано 29 вер 2024
- Thin-plastic food wrappers make up half the garbage floating in our oceans, but they’re difficult to recycle. One company has invented a way to replace these plastics with seaweed. Now, it stands as a finalist for Tom Ford’s Plastic Innovation Prize worth more than $1 million.
EDITOR'S NOTE: Zerocircle came in second place for the Tom Ford Plastic Innovation Prize and was awarded $250,000. For more information, visit plasticprize.org/.
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Can Indian Seaweed Replace Plastic? | World Wide Waste | Insider Business
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Thanks so much!
Jesus is King of kings and Lord of lords
LOL -------far east has been using rice, seaweed and many other things as wrappers for centuries ! LOL
LESS HUMAN ( especially from the 3rd world EVER DEPENDENT people ) WILL BE MUCH BETTER THAN ANTHING ELSE !
I shared this to my community tab so more people will see it
Save the oceans from toxic plastic
@@amanewithjesus that's why u need to spam , to prove his worth lol
This product may be a bit more expensive to purchase, but the fact that it is edible, compostable, and truly biodegradable means the true cost of this product is very minute compared to the true cost of traditional plastic which is way to high in the long run. I cant wait for this product to be offered publicly. This is awesome!!
Yes we can even take to space. And in space we dont have to worry about eating cause we have weed.
Wouldnt it be better if spaceman could smoke it.
To anyone who thinks logically yes. But to companies that are trying to maximize their profits, the extra few cents times the millions of products unfortunately become a dealbreaker. Sadly the only way we’ll see a switch is by finding something cheaper
I dont get how it can more expensive? Seaweed grows so fast. Don't make sense. Then wonder why the world gonna keep using plastics
@@Yxfttst it might get cheap if it gets cultivated in large scale tho.
goverments should subsidise these kind of products
Let them all win the competition. They're heroes and i think the plastic production should be applied in Indonesia because of the number of people living there.
Shuuutttt uppp not everyone gets a participation trophy in the real world.
@@Makeitwithmanny 🍪 have a cookie Manny, I hope it makes your day a bit better :)
@@Makeitwithmanny yeah as if winning is the point here
@@BigTrees can I have a cookie 🥺
@@ravenxrgaming4672 🍪🍪 have 2 : )
Government and Other big organisations should start funding and commercializing this product...And for it's development more research scops and areas should be created in this field...It looks amazing! It has bright future..Wish I could work in this industry!
if the govt. pressures the manufacturers to handle recycling of their own packaging this would be a huge hit! you could see everyone using this instead of working on waste management!
These are kind of women that i consider feminists.. They are here to make a real change not to be better than anyone! Hats off and respect to the whole team!
More power to this co. 🌈💐
I love the idea, I just wonder how this would look scaled up, to the level that would be needed to supply the world.. they barely touched on the subject. If we want something new it needs to stay as harmless as possible even on very large scale.
Great jod, all the best ❤️
Plastic made from seaweed and it’s edible? This is, by far, one of the magnificent achievements. Kudos to the whole team!
@@Anonymous24713 "Do you eat your burger with or without the skin?"
nobody would eat packaging that’s been handled and sitting out with who knows what
@29. The point is not to be able to eat it, but the fact that it will replace the plastics that turn into micro plastics, which are inedible, that find it’s way into our waters and food.
contaminants? sounds like extra flavor to me!
Not everyone eats seaweed
They won 2nd place! That's so awesome! Congratulations to them, they're doing amazing work
Who won the first place?
@@popsiccllee3380 its in the description box
@@popsiccllee3380 Sway came first 😊
But this video was made first you can see the clips from this video in the sway.
I’ve been telling ppl to do this 20 years ago, and that it will feed fish if thrown in ocean.
I seriously cannot wait for this to become public for consumers this is such a big game changer for every one. Fantastic work to Neha and their team!!! 👏👏👏👏
This is probably sodium alginate which is widely used to make jelly for decades, you can already buy it in supermarket anytime
Bioplastic was originally invented in the form of celluloid around 1850, this is not news nor is it a simple question of just dropping it in the market chain.
The question is, as it always is; who pays?
"The big oil companies should pay, they're the ones polluting."
- Well big oil still have to earn money, how do they do that? They raise prices. Meaning they'll get outcompeted by conventional plastic manufacturers. They either have to rely on food producers marketing their bioplast in the packaging making up the lost money, or the governments have to ban conventional plastics in some sort.
"The government should pay, they're the ones that are worried."
- Who pays for the government? The people.
In the end, we, as consumers either have to pay more or use conventional plastics.
Also, bioplastics have been used for many years already. In the UK, KitKat packaging have been biodegradable since 2010
@@Hoppp4848 the answer is simple mass produce seaweed to make it cheaper. Even royal family gave prize to Notpla, but this is the saddest part. Once greedy western "civilizations" will "lead" the way, it means we will be doomed. Only way for this to survive is to stay in the hands of India, Chile, China, Africa, etc., but not the west.
@@matildo4ka7 Who will invest the many many billions of dollars to start mass-producing at a scale similar to conventional plastics?
The royals gave them £1.000.000, a decent amount for an operation their scale but nowhere near enough for mass-production and if you want mass adoption you need mass production (it even rhymes 👌) for mass production you need mass amounts of cash and mass amount of cashflow. Where to get the both of them? From these dumb vestern capitalists. We'll have to work with them, no matter what.
I think you're trying to blame someone when there's noone to actually blame. It's just an unfortunate matter of plastics being stupid cheap to produce.
unless they can make it cheaper than plastic, it probably won’t see widespread use
Hats off to Neha and Team
When the world is busy in making weapons, destroying environment in name of ease of living products,
This is called a sustainable real innovation.
Keep doing good work
How could you possibly know if something that literally no one is using at even a percentage of a percentage at scale will work?
You can’t even know if demand can be close to satisfied… to replace your evil plastic. The plastic isn’t the problem it’s the mentality of humans which also is a scaling issue.
Too many people on the planet maybe you can do us a favor. I mean for the environment right?
Yea weapons that keep you safe moron.
Don’t let foreign or any companies try to take local seaweed at all costs, the mangroves around the coasts are protecting the most condensed populations and most ancient sites from natural disaster. The plastic issues has many options and will go on for years.
@@chillkaro911 Is your name Indian? I'm not even Chinese, but your race is one to talk, there is a billion of you guys. So why don't you cull your own numbers before talking about another race.
The Indian government should fund this asap and intervene at a very minute level and let these guys do their best. This is amazing.
I’ve been telling ppl to do this 20 years ago, and that it will feed fish if thrown in ocean.
That's not going to happen because they are busy in something else 😂😂😂😂
It's already funded.
If it's from India any other country will do it better and cleaner
I LOVE how you can put food in it, then just throw the whole packet into boiling water, and eat the packaging. This is the way to revolutionize MREs & single-serving meals! 🥳🎉
between this & rice-paper … “eat the packaging!” is an awesome idea, just needs the right type of recipes.
“cut the packaging up into strips & treat it like noodles” seems like one place to start. 🥰
Its cool, but knowing how dirty store backroom and shelves are, I probably wouldn't want to eat it. But it would be great to allow it to naturally decompose.
Since it dissolves easily in water, I don't think it will last long term for MREs once it gets in contact with humidity.
@@gaveintothedarkness … It seems perfect when a food is packaged in thin plastic, protected by a cardboard box. (still a pretty big category!) I would open the box, *wash* the bio-plastic, then cook as directed, including eating the bio-plastic. which becomes noodles, or whatev?
💯 would WASH it, very agreed on that! 😊👍
the other way to sell bio-plastic with food, is like Breakfast Cerial bag-in-a-box. I doubt the bag would ever taste good in cerial, but you could put it in a soup later, if you really wanted to find a way to eat it. … ppl who don’t like eating it can easily compost, but I’m trying to think of places it *might* actually work. 🤣
Who cares about who wins the prizes, hats off to all the companies fighting for change! Y’all are the real hero’s of humanity and the world ❤
Yes.
Who wins have bigger chances of receive ample financing and actually get to the final consumer, so in a practical sense it does matter.
@@biazacha I see your point, and I agree! I was more concerned about the motive behind the competition. It’s a good thing that various laboratories are coming up with solutions to fight the plastic consumption around the world. To that, I applaud them for trying, regardless who ends up taking the prize.
Agree. Hope the one that wins though is best for the environment. I.e no side effects or unknown impacts.
Though it will probably be down to cost effectiveness. Cheapest labour
Not really fighting for change to be honest. It’s fighting for money and a slice of the new trend
We always hear amazing creations like this but often never gets put out for public use for some reason.
I really do hope this gets mass produced worldwide.
Its usually because of monopolies or industries. None of them want to be overtaken, so they work hard into destroying any Innovation
Because Food manufacturer doesnt want to cut profit or raise price just to change the packaging material.
Yeah let's let every Indian person start to grow this so we can use it world wide
it seems extremeli limited in use because it disolves in contact with water (and propably other fluids) so normal plastic is far superior to this because the seaweed plastic just has almost none of the advantages normal plastic has so its unlikeli to make big impact
Its a give or take....either biodegradable but limited use or versatile and polluting..😪....or ....it literally revolves around the basic concept of what a biodegradable of.... material.....endless loop😪
I don't mind paying higher price for plastics knowing I am reducing my carbon footprint! Wish then luck❤🎉
If it’s expensive it won’t go well overseas
I hope you mean you don't mind paying higher price for plastic *alternatives* ...
@@VitaKet yesssss
@@ASMRSOUNDQUEEN i will pay for double the amount of plastics so your efforts are in vain
Do you use toilet paper?
Congratulations to zerocircle for winning second place! It's an incredible achievement, and they should be very proud of the work they do.
2nd prize in what?
Should have been done ages ago. I’ve been telling ppl to do this 20 years ago, and that it will feed fish if thrown in ocean.
It will be interesting to see the economics at industrial scale. There is obviously a lot of hand touch in the current process as it's still at the laboratory stage. Also, it appears to be energy intensive. It would be nice to see a comparison to petroleum based plastics at industrial scale. Part of that analysis should include 'post use' economics.
I wish this company and others like it success.
Part of the current solutions with plastic does not account for recycling, cost on the ecology, health impacts etc. All of this should be part of the price that goes with plastic. In order to make a fair comparison.
@@samre3006 Oil companies and plastic manufacturers need to be taxed or fined for ecological damage before they will consider alternatives for their cheap to manufacture products.
If big recycling corporations don’t put road blocks from it scaling up
@@thebigpicture2032 Some governments and organizations are calling for "extended producer responsibility" (EPR) policies, which would require companies to take responsibility for the entire lifecycle of their products, including the end-of-life disposal and cleanup costs. EPR policies are already in place for certain types of products, such as electronic waste in most vesten countries.
Also they're fined for cleanup costs of oil spills (At least in US waters)
@@Hoppp4848 ERP in packaging I was able to find only in Japan and Slovakia. In Japan it's been in place since the late 90s. In the US it (packaging ERP) is not in place, but there are some companies like TerraCycle that work with some manufacturers. Another problem with biodegradable plastic is that it's NOT RECYCLABLE. I bet oil companies will use it as an argument. I can imagine their advertisement: "Our packaging brings 1000 recycled pairs of jeans to poor families". This kind of rhetoric biodegradable product manufacturers won't be able to use. The circular economy that the West is trying to sell now is against biodegradable plastics by default as you cannot REUSE them. Another reason why ERP won't work especially in the US is the laziness of the consumers. Banning is the only answer. And it is not going to happen. CNBC this week is bragging about the US to be a top energy supplier (questionable) in the World. Seaweed is not going to be on the agenda for dems or republicans for the next 20 years as they are too obsessed with oil and gas money FOR NOW :(
I recall watching a video a many years ago about mushrooms being able to be molded into disposable containers, I was very excited and happy to see we could potentially use them for Togo boxes and single use utensils. Nothing ever came of it. I hope and pray for our future generations that we can change our single use plastic problem.
Wonder how many years till something like this is main stream though.
Simple, it's because plastic and oil capitalists shut them down.
Hey! Mushrooms are currently being used to make single use utensils & packaging boxes.
@@bharati9322s only by very select companies.
Exactly. So many amazing creations just disappear and never put out there.
Because Big Businessman don't want them to disrupt plastic industry
Wow a lot of people have guilt about polluting but she actually decided to do something about it. Such an impressive team.
I’ve been telling ppl to do this 20 years ago, and that it will feed fish if thrown in ocean.
I'm glad that "Insider Business" wanted to bring this innovation by Neha and team equal to the rest of the international researchers. I geneuinley think India is the future of Pure innovation with long term benefits and offcourse with minimum budget.
Here in Italy a lot of clear plastic-like packagings for products sold in the supermarket are made of corn and are labelled to be thrown either into the paper or the organic waste bin.
The more alternatives the better!
Wow, that sounds so cool! In my country, we just charge customers for plastic bags. Which is kinda pointless as it's just some cents.
Very true although it would even be better if we could get rid of one time use packaging altogether
@@SultrySecrets here too, but even those plastic bags have all been compostable by law for some years now.
Yeah it's just a few cents but charging for something that was previously free should be enough to incentivize people to use them less
Result: They came 2nd guys.
A great material! It can't replace all uses of plastic as it's dissolvable in water, but maybe one of the other plastic alternatives can. At the same time that also makes it more practical than plastic for some uses, as for the teabags or the wrapping of noodles shown in the video. I hope to find it in our stores soon!
Yeah, teabags are a seriously prime opportunity for this kind of stuff. Remember though: Bioplastics are not new, not at all. Celluloid was invented around 1850. Nestlé's KitCats have been bioplast since 2010
Disolves in boiling water, I think in normal water it should be fine for may days if not months. Not sure
@@prashant-ul2sn it's probably still get way weaker over time with air humidity
@@Hoppp4848 as a film it won't. And you don't know the full recipe anyways to make this assumption. Good future this product has even as just an additive to other materials. Google Notpla products like Takeaway boxes.
@@prashant-ul2sn No, it really dissolves in just water. Bought a whole pack of degradable plastic, and it does the job, but when my hand is sweaty/wet, the handle is really gonna tear apart. Even if you wash the plastic, it will dissolve. Don't even ask if it's raining the plastic just dissolve.
Wishing success to all those individuals/companies trying to phase out plastic.
Investing appropriately today can save you a whole lot of stress in the nearest future
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This is a fantastic step toward a more sustainable future. Unfortunately, it’s not the first time a biodegradable material has threatened the petroleum industry’s stranglehold on packaging materials. We can only hope that ZeroCircle and similar companies do not get bought out by big oil just for them to eat their competition…
Should have been done ages ago. I’ve been telling ppl to do this 20 years ago, and that it will feed fish if thrown in ocean.
you'd need to put some sort of hydrophobic coating on it for it to be viable on food packaging but i'd be excited to see the results. I don't think anyone is truly aware of the damage plastics are doing to our health and the health of animals.
This is what we need more of! Stop the gloom and doom, give people hope! I’m not saying not to warn people of problems we face, I’m saying explaining the problem and challenging people to find solutions is better than making them feel we’re doomed! Great job to all who are involved!
I agree, I think this is amazing!! However we do need that doom and gloom mentality when it comes to some things, if we keep waiting for a green concrete alternative and nothing turns up it will be far too late!
Same, we should innovate instead of doing what rich white people (Thunberg) say and go live in the stone age. All fine when you have a land to live on and money to spend.
There`s not much gloom and doom in this industry/community/however you want to call it, apart from the media and politics ofc, because panic sells. 90% of people involved in climate, sustainability and all that jazz, are all about giving hope, finding solutions to the problems we face pretty much every day.
btw. you know cyberpunk, right? There is a whole genre of sci-fi called solarpunk, which is "a literary and artistic movement that envisions and works toward actualizing a sustainable future interconnected with nature and community, rejecting "climate doomerism""
Yes give people hope whit baubles this is worth billions what are they giving a million 1.2 that's nothing geus these Indians are real Indians they love themselves some useless baubles
@@Brianz99 etc etc etc do u mean Russia China and turkey and Syria crisis we are doomed that's just a fact a lot of don't wanna see that but we hit a point we're if we keep up this greed in needing things we will have used up our resources whitin the next 10 years consuming only is getting bigger and resources are not getting added not the ones truly important
So wonderful. Fills one with so much hope. Thank you Zerocircle, Tom Ford and Lonely Whale, and all the other companies trying to take a step in the right direction. Lets make it happen.
@@Luzfahm if you are stereotyping Indian people as scammers then why shouldn't we stereotype you as the negative your country represents!
@@AnonYMous-pv3pydon’t bother interacting with trolls. They say shockingly horrible things on purpose to make others come down to their level
@@Luzfahm Nah, he means as someone who does your country’s math. Good luck passing your APs.
No such thing as a 'citizen of [the] world'.
@@WiggaMachiavelli you live on this planet you donut so you're technically the citizen of the world
We've been using bio plastics in the Philippines for a long time now (since 2015). It's made out of cassava but would love to use this seaweed plastics too. I hope it should replace plastics worldwide. I hope states all over the world would start making laws that advocate the use of biodegradable plastics. In my city, non-bio plastics are not allowed. ☺️
Mmm
i dont know you guys are using bio plastics over there :0.maybe someday later we an use it too!
Philippines mentioned 😊
I’ve been telling ppl to do this 20 years ago, and that it will feed fish if thrown in ocean.
And this is the first time I'm hearing this 🤷🤦and I'm an Indian... Our media is so garbage for not covering such world changing event
A year back i saw neha's venture in some youtube video and was so faccinated by it. Shared on all of my socials and whenever i had a talk with people i did mention about it and wanting this news to go viral so that many could support it. Finally its getting the attention it is needed! Hope this venture be successful so that we all can eliminate atleast a small percent of today's living curse ‘plastic’!
Extremely proud of them, Extremely proud of our Indian scientists, they should be given Nobel peace prize for their noble yet genuine hard work.❤️❤️❤️❤️
They would win a Nobel prize in their scientific field, but other than that I agree!
Unfortunately they will only get a noble prize when this product is put into large scale use (and even then probably not). Noble prizes aren't just thrown around to whoever does hardwork
I dunno, the product might not sell enough to “replace” plastic, if the demand doesn’t go high up it’s basically useless
Few cents and a deal breaker?? Nah no way.
@@imalemon3841 no
What a fantastic work. We humans constantly strive for a secure and healthy planet, but we never consider how to make the planet more livable in the long run. We don't spend as much money on research into how to improve the world as we did on armaments. These efforts offer us hope.
Thank you my dear Indians you guys are real Heroes Bater than Bollywood .
Thank you
Doctors, Scientist, Engineer, and Researchers who working hard 🙏❤️
and thanks to me who thanking you 🙏😀
Love you guys ❤️
Many years ago I read an article about making "plastic" from corn starch. The idea never materialized, but I hope that this moves forward in a big way. Edible packaging would be a wonderful innovation.
I'm pretty sure there is plastic made of starch already :) they degrade quite fast and is normalised in some countries now
I dont think the rich plastic companies will ever let this happen
Here in Italy a lot of clear plastic-like packagings for products sold in the supermarket are made of corn and are labelled to be thrown either into the paper or the organic waste bin.
The problem with corn starch is that we use it for food consumption. I don't know many dishes in India that have seaweed in it. For China and Japan it's going to be a different problem as they consume seaweed and use it in many dishes. So for India it can be a very good solution as this material won't compete as a food source. In a country with the highest population in the world it's crucial. They cannot afford to use farm land to produce plastic, but coastline is a different story and because India is a peninsula it's actually a PERFECT solution for them. As they will keep their people fed and won't pollute my favorite Indian ocean with plastic.
My dogs poop bags are made from cornstarch
India has alot of useful inventions but this is on another level✨
India is also a big part of the pollution problem
@@christianz-jg2bh This is complete hypocritical statement from western. Have you checked which are those country who has emitted more Green House gases since hundreds of years. Its your western so called developed country. And india is still at lowest in emission since 100s of years. You made development by killing environment and looting ours wealth. Now this hypocritical statement by not only you but entire west. Also check present days GHG emissions per capita if you are not illiterate because I see most western people has low iq to understand things by own and rely on their propaganda news. God bless you 😊
@@christianz-jg2bh really?
@@christianz-jg2bhhypocritical western countries! You people already polluted the world for the last 400 years during your growth cycle. And now that you're developed, you are lecturing India and China😂😂
@@christianz-jg2bhnot nearly as USA they make huge percentage of waste and dumb it into Africa such evils.
the way they did all this without even knowing the competition existed......that's special. it shows they weren't just in it for the prize money. hope they won!!!
This company is worth investing in. I hope the Indian government will give its full support so they can show the world and be the leader in this industry.
Yea I hope our government look at its potential
As if it's going to happen. The government isn't like you think it is.
@@AjumSheiCaydaresh13579 I can understand what you are thinking but if these people at least have the environment to do these experiment and have a high tech company set up there and also be prominent 8 to compete for this environmentally friendly plastic race, I think it's not like the government ignores it outright but they should indeed look at it more which I hope they will. For that, zerocircle should go mainstream and they are at their baby stage now.
Investors only care about profits and the base cost of this is higher. Would need some philanthrophists
If I'm not wrong, they have already secured a ton of subsidies, since the Central Government here is very much pro-startup
Even if it took weeks to degrade, that would be a major improvement over oil based plastic. I hope this becomes a dominant alternative soon.
I wonder how much electricity is used to produce these small samples in the "manufacture" that is mentioned 🤔
this type of seaweed are plenty available in Malaysia. It is often called as sea's bird's nest and it is stay true to the description. The nutritional quality of this seaweed is huge as it is very rich in collagen where it used as a supplement for body joints and skin while 100 times cheaper than bird's nest.
We should support this team!!!! While everyone was saying to avoid plastic only on their words! Zerocircle Neha and team have established it!!!! Many companies have to invest and support a good team like this who are concerned for the global health... Soon your sea weed plastics should be used everywhere in India! Hats off team!!🤝🤝❤️
Everyday someone come with good idea but The problem is implementing it and the plastic money is big ,they got there hand in everything.
I'm sure that initially, it'll be costly. But just like everything, once it's mass produced everywhere, prices will definitely drop
Insider: "we'll leave a link to the winning companies in the description"
Also Insider: *just doesn't leave a link*
I thought I missed something in the description, so I came to the comments to see if anyone else noticed.
That's because the winner hasn't been announced yet. They'll put it in the discription once it has been announced.
@@Redzwan WELL WHEN WILL IT BE ANNCOUNCED IM IMPAITENT
@@jackorider_zero Looked up some articles and mentioned around spring this year. I don't know when precisely, so go and and ask Tom Ford.
@@Redzwan bet
This is fantastic, this type of innovation needs to be supported and implemented as an industry standard!
So you're telling me that eating the burger with the peel will soon be more than just a meme.
What's really sad with all these Insider Business videos about people and business managing and utilizing "waste" for newer greener products is that it's always in other countries. Why is none of this stuff in the West? Aren't we supposed to be the "green" countries? We're always lecturing other countries about our higher standards, yet we aren't doing stuff like this. We have to over and over listen to stupid politicians bloviate, and Greta Thunberg throw a temper tantrum, about "the environment" instead of pushing for real solutions to real problems.
It's almost because stretching into generalisation here it's is performative activism in the west ..
Big oil is probably trying to figure out how to keep them out of the system. I hope these guys can scale and be competitive in the international market.
Exactly. Big oil is so vile.
Big oil will simply make a subsidary and do it on a bigger scale. lol
Big oil likes money not oil. If you can make money off this, big oil will be investing too.
Plastic is actually pretty cheap but they sell it for more expensive. They'll probably lower their prices making it hard for seaweed plastic to compete :(
Big oil is doing nothing since none of them are scalable or economically efficient.
The amount of labour and resources which goes into this makes it futile. I could see it being used elsewhere.
We don’t just need an alternative, we need a complete replacement. When we get to this point we have to get countries to ban the production and use of plastic. I believe we are Well capable of this, and it is neccesary for our future, we have already got a massive ripple effect of problems with wildife nature and even our own hormones as humans with the amount of plastic around us interfering with our health.
As a researcher from Pakistan. Well-done India. Keep it up.
3:49 thank you for also covering unintended consequences. Whenever a plastic alternative is proposed, my internal pessimist wonders what could potentially go wrong - though I wouldn't say that means alternatives aren't still worth pursuing. We definitely need to move away from single use plastics, but we need to be prepared with our solutions, so we aren't caught unawares and wind up trading one problem for another.
8:17 glad to see wildlife effects are considered as part of the contest. I hope they are looking past immediate things like toxicity.
Eg. When those 6-pack rings made of brewer's yeast were in a viral video years ago, I wondered thing like: if some made it into the environment, would birds consider them an easy meal and fill up on them, thereby (1) dispersing less seeds (2) getting nutritional deficiencies, or could they lead to algae blooms if they made it unto waterways.
@@Hermititis we need seaweed. It's beneficial for coastal wild life. If you check the data you will be terrified that seaweed degraded in the shorelines in 20th century due to pollution, warming, etc. Same as mangrove forests. It's a win-win, but mostly win for the oceans. And with global warming it's actually necessary. Of course, it shouldn't be invasive seaweed, etc. only native species in perfect circumstances. Without seaweed any coastline is just underwater desert.
@@matildo4ka7 , sorry, I didn't mean to imply that I think this is a bad solution! I'm just pointing out that I've never seen other plastic alternative videos bother to even mention potential unintended consequences, so I wanted to express appreciation for it being done here.
@@Hermititis you are correct as everything is good but in measured quantities.
Regrettably, a significant portion of our plastic production results from the byproduct of oil, placing those involved in direct conflict with the powerful oil and gas industry lobbyists. Despite these challenging circumstances, I extend my best wishes to them, knowing they will face significant resistance from big oil and gas.
Just WOW! Well done India lots of love & appreciation from Pakistan 🇵🇰
Who's winning elections bro?
Wow, what an innovation! India has been taking many amazing initiatives to save the nature. These crusaders must be recognized n their work supported. Keep rocking India. Jai Hind!
not india but it is a group of nature concerned companies doing this first idea was by foreigners they just took inspiration from it thats it
Awesome love India from the USA 🇺🇸
Cringe
This is really cool!!! Kudos to all the brilliant scientists for saving the world!!!!!!😍
This seaweed is edible and have more value as a food than plastic substitute.
Here’s the major issue with this. While the majority of end consumers would love to see this in their products, they aren’t their target customer. Their target customer is going to be manufacturers and manufacturers want the cheapest possible material. This material is so labor intensive that there just no way it could compare in price to plastic. Therefore, we might not see this in mass anytime soon, if ever
True
Have u heard of economies of scale?????
Hopefully there are more improvements in regards to making the production of this as cheap as possible, and also we need congress to pass laws that makes it mandatory to use non plastic bags, and in general non plastic items.
@@MeenPo786 yes and that isn’t always enough. They would need to pass laws restricting the use of our current types of plastic
I love when scientists find alternative materials for plastic, but I always keep hearing about new plastic alternatives, but then nothing comes of it. Hopefully this is different
India never fails to Surprise the world
They cause most of the pollution
@@christianz-jg2bh Exactly 😂
But inorder to scale it like big plastic manufacturing plants, how affordable it is, will we the end consumers get it for 1-2₹? Will the shopkeepers eill get them for 30-40p? Will the supermarkets will be able to sell it for 10-20₹? What is the shelf life? Effect of rain water, tap water, will it dissolve in them too?
Please i need to know 🙏
Now-a-days India is excelling in every field.
Always knew this was possible and the day has come! Thank you for your hard work and dedication!
This is great . Brilliant minds from all parts of the world working to improve the human condition! Cheers to the researching team!!
This is so awesome! They should show these in schools!
I'm curious about its CO2 footprint as well. Farming seaweed helps pull co2 out of the ocean, which is great for local wildlife. (Though I don't know about the footprint of their development process compared with conventional plastics.) but I'm optimistic. this is great. and I'd gladly pay a bit extra for sustainable packaging materials
The overall cost benefit analysis is that the social benefits outweigh the social costs I guess.
Go India 🥰 Smart scientists at work! Love it!
This is really appreciated, innovations like these are very much needed for reducing the pollution caused by plastic...it will be a game changing win if this product can be made cheaper and be released to the public to use💯
Brilliant innovation ✨👌
The fact that the product is 100% biodegradable and at a very fast rate, is a big plus for me. Doesn't matter if i can or cannot eat it!
Lmao, most plastic used in packaging is already biodegradable (different organisms eat it yes) , but it's not done because it's not cost effective
@@plopiaplopia3736 It's also not done because is requires too much time. And the same might go for this. As far as is know the current organic waste composting processes take about six weeks due to special bacteria. If that cannot be done with this packaging, it cannot go into organic waste and has to be burned.
This is such exciting news!!! thank you everyone at zerocircle for trying to solve one of the biggest waste problems!! 👏🏽👏🏽
I wish this becomes the main source of plastic! More companies get on board!Good job to everyone who discovered and work so hard for this 👏
Should have been done ages ago. I’ve been telling ppl to do this 20 years ago, and that it will feed fish if thrown in ocean.
Really excited about this
I remember the time you were everywhere.
This is so moving to watch, absolutely incredible. Knowing that there are driven and talented people out there working on a replacement for plastic gives me hope.
It's taking lots of water
It's not like plastic will never get decomposed
It's better create decomposers that can consume plastic rather than another plastic
This is brilliant! I am very hopeful these kind of materials will become standard in the near future, however I do worry about exactly how much clean water is needed to make this happen? Availability of fresh clean water is now also a problem that needs solving.
Such a good idea This would be so useful for sandwich/fruit bags for my kids Kindy!! All the best in the process of making this accessable and affordable for people globally good luck.
I would definitely buy these good plastics products! Well done!!
Omg!! 🤩 Wow!!! This is a miracle!!! God I hope this actually gets implemented and we stop the polluting altogether! She is absolutely right about being a millennial and having that guilt instilled in us about plastic garbage, I have such a hard time throwing anything away that could possibly be reused to the point where it gives me serious anxiety…
It’s insane to watch pre-WWII footage and see that nothing is plastic (since it hadn’t really been mass produced yet), and then just a few years after the war - plastic is everywhere 😮
I’m really surprised we don’t make some kind of plastic. That’s biodegradable out of corn by now, but I have noticed that some of the potato-based packaging peanuts are starting to become common place. They melt in water as well as in your mouth, pretty much like a light Chito without the cheddar.
We make PLA out of corn (or anything with sugar). it is compostable but not biodegradable.
There are plenty options but the properties offered by bio based products have limitations. Eg. Tide pods itself dissolve in water but the bag or box they are sold in still needs to be be made of a thermoplastic able to withstand the mechanical and chemical requirements through this products life.
@@aamirsheikh2610 That's why I still buy powder Tide in cardboard boxes...unless/until they discontinue it.
This is amazing and great work from the company. I’m sure this will replace some packaging solutions. Cost for the solution is the biggest difference maker.
Although we must understand plastics in the ocean is a human problem not just a plastic problem.
This is incredible! The more solutions we find like this, the sooner we can help our planet!
Short answer= NO. Reason being that plastic is a byproduct of fuel refinement. As long as we are refining oil into gasoline we will be finding more uses for plastic since using a waste product will always be cheaper than an engineered product.
I am so proud being an Indian bcs of these scientist. ❤️😍
Lol proud Indians everywhere
I hope this company becomes the 1st unicorn doing this and that they grow globally.
That depends how things go globally and if more people want anything to do with this
Now when I'm done eating my bag of chips, I can eat the bag too instead of getting slapped in the face with a pound of crumbs.
The sad thing is, if it is not cheap big companies won’t use it. Big corporations don’t care about the environment they care about the money in their pockets. I pray this works out!
Agreed. Capitalism is killing the planet
I own a plastic bag manufacturing firm and i hope these people don't succeed. I see them as a competition to me.
@@Napolean-mt3ms how? They are changing the world though?
What a beautiful video! It's so inspiring to see the amount of research and the sourcing of every small component!
Super cool vid!
If it dissolves in water in hours, won't it get damaged by the stuff it's supposed to be packaging?
We definitely need more such researchers! Fantastic work!
This is absolutely fantastic, i wish them the best for reaching their goals.
Appreciate the level of care for the environmental impact, its always going to have an affect however if we can reduce it as much as possible its a major step in positive momentum compared to the current impact.
Would be interesting to know what species are likely to benefit from extra seaweed snacking, there could be a detrimental side affect to diversity if any one or few species begin to flourish with the new access to easy food. They could dominate diversity and put stress on competition for other shared food sources with other species. This could have a flow on effect (less of one fish that use to hunt a molluscs is no longer at a population that keeps the molluscs in balance, then the molluscs start breeding more and therefore eating more, that could put competition on other species that eat what the molluscs do) and change the whole ecosystem. Its a tricky balance to play.
On a positive note, more oxygen in the ocean means less co2 and therefore better at temp regulation and the seaweed will create safe nursery's for some aquatic species.
Is it possible, make fishing net from it , may solve a prime problem of coast line of our India..
Absolutely amazing stuff. We definitely need more innovation like this. Thanks for sharing!
you cant pack food into something that desolves in water.
I hope we can find a replacement for plastic packaging that is able to hold water, as that is sometimes important as well!
The metal cans or bottles are doing the its job in replacing platic ones.
@@anhla732 Thanks a good point!
Bambooos are alternate to hold water this can be effective or otherwise dried pumpkins.
@@solotraveler8326 you're not wrong! I mean, yes they can hold water, but I should have phrased my comment better! I mean to protect things from getting water in them. You know?
As a plastic bag manufacturer i hope we don't find other replacements.
Thats awesome..
Thank you for putting this out..
I hope this helps in making it easy to reduce plastic needs
If they can produce 50 billion tons per year then maybe.