SHIFTING FROM FOSSIL PLASTICS TO NATURAL POLYMERS
SHIFTING FROM FOSSIL PLASTICS TO NATURAL POLYMERS
We have been
talking about reducing single-use plastics for decades, but progress has been
painfully slow. Now, here comes a new approach—already tested by innovative
companies like Notpla—that could make a real difference. And I believe it’s an
approach the Philippines should adopt as soon as possible.
Why? Because
Notpla prefers to use seaweed as a raw material for making natural
polymers—biodegradable, compostable packaging that disappears. This is not just
good for the planet; it’s good for our economy, too. We are already one of the
world’s largest producers of seaweed, with over 200,000 coastal families
engaged in farming it, particularly in Mindanao, Sulu, and Bohol. Imagine the
boost to their livelihoods if we could link our seaweed production directly to
a cutting-edge packaging industry.
Notpla’s model
has several key strengths. First, their seaweed grows fast—up to a meter a
day—without the need for freshwater, fertilizers, or arable land. This means it
doesn’t compete with food crops and doesn’t put pressure on scarce land
resources. Second, their products biodegrade completely in just 4–6 weeks, even
in home composting conditions. And third, they leave behind no
microplastics—unlike many so-called “bioplastics” that still create pollution
in microscopic form.
The company’s
portfolio is impressive: food containers, cutlery, sachets, edible liquid pods,
and more. In Europe alone, they have already replaced over 21 million
single-use plastic items. That’s impact you can measure. No wonder they won the
prestigious Earthshot Prize for innovation in sustainable packaging.
If this sounds
too “foreign” to work here, think again. The Philippines is already producing
the very raw materials needed. Our main seaweed exports—Kappaphycus, Eucheuma,
and Gracilaria—are excellent for carrageenan and agar production, both of which
are viable bases for biopolymer manufacturing. We also have processing
by-products that are currently underused or wasted; these could be converted
into packaging films, wrappers, and even agricultural products like seed pods.
Here is where I
believe government must act with urgency. We should instruct our Embassy in
London to enter into technology agreements with Notpla. This should not be
another “study now, maybe act later” scenario. Time is ticking for the planet,
and our coastal communities could be the first beneficiaries if we move
quickly.
The potential
benefits go far beyond reducing plastic waste. Seaweed farming absorbs carbon
dioxide and helps deacidify our oceans, making it climate positive. At the
community level, it could mean new livelihood streams: fisherfolk trained in
seaweed cultivation, youth and women’s groups engaged in packaging design and
branding, and barangay-level facilities producing biodegradable films for local
markets.
Even better,
this fits neatly into the concept of a circular economy. Used packaging could
go straight into compost bins or biogas digesters, returning nutrients to the
soil instead of clogging waterways. Coastal barangays could integrate this into
their Materials Recovery Facilities (MRFs), ensuring that waste management is
not just about collection but about transformation.
Of course,
scaling this up will require coordinated action. We will need R&D funding
to adapt the technology to our local seaweed species. We will need policies
that set clear definitions distinguishing natural polymers from fossil-based
plastics and conventional bioplastics. And we will need public procurement
programs to create a guaranteed market for these materials, especially in
government institutions, schools, and public events.
The shift to
natural polymers will also require consumer education. People must understand
that these materials behave differently from conventional plastics—they are not
designed to last forever, and that’s the point. Packaging should protect goods
while they are in use and then vanish harmlessly, just like a fruit peel
returning to the soil.
Some skeptics
will ask: Is this scalable? The answer is yes—but only if we start now. The
Philippines produced about 1.6 million metric tons of fresh seaweed in 2023,
worth ₱12.7 billion. If even a small fraction of that were diverted into
high-value biopolymer production, we could position ourselves as a global
leader in sustainable packaging—while uplifting our coastal communities and
cleaning up our environment.
We keep hearing
that plastic pollution is one of the most pressing environmental problems of
our time. True enough. But if we keep focusing only on waste management and
recycling, we’re missing the bigger opportunity: replacing fossil plastics at
the source with materials that are safe, scalable, and truly circular.
The technology
exists. The raw materials are here. The need is urgent. What’s missing is
decisive action to connect the dots—linking our seaweed farmers to world-class
innovators and turning the Philippines into a hub for nature-based packaging
solutions.
So, here’s my suggestion--let’s
stop seeing seaweed only as a food export commodity and start seeing it as the
foundation of a whole new industry—one that cleans the ocean, reduces carbon,
provides jobs, and makes our plastic problem disappear, quite literally.
Ramon Ike V. Seneres,
www.facebook.com/ike.seneres
iseneres@yahoo.com,
senseneres.blogspot.com
10-18-2025
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