Wednesday, November 20, 2019
These two 25-year-olds may have just solved the plastic crisis
These two 25-year-olds may have just solved the plastic crisis These two 25-year-olds may have just solved the plastic crisis Itâs comforting to think that once you drop your plastic container into that ubiquitous blue recycling bin, youâve fulfilled your eco-friendly duty for the day. Unfortunately, the data says otherwise.Only 9% of plastics actually get recycled. The rest is going to landfills and incinerators where itâs being burned for energy, but most of it is emitted as Co2 into the atmosphere. At the current rate of recycling waste plastics, itâs projected that there will be more plastic than fish in our oceans by 2050.Miranda Wang and Jeanny Yao, the founders of BioCellection Inc. have found a way to address the plastic crisis, head-on. The cofounders relayed their ideation of BioCellection Inc. at the 2019 Women in the World summit held earlier this month.âI think whatâs so difficult for consumers to understand is that when we take a piece of plastic and put it in a recycling bin, thatâs actually getting recycled. Well, guess what? Itâs doesnât ⦠â says Wang.The 25-year-old c o-founder of BioCellection Inc. graduated from University of Pennsylvania with a Bachelor of Arts in Biology in 2016. Her business partner Yao graduated that same year from the University of Toronto with a BS in Biochemistry and Environmental Sciences. Both received recognition from Forbes 30 under 30 in 2018. Follow Ladders on Flipboard!Follow Laddersâ magazines on Flipboard covering Happiness, Productivity, Job Satisfaction, Neuroscience, and more!Together, the young entrepreneurs have subverted the notion that recycling our plastic is sustainable. Poor waste management and lack of waste collection infrastructure mean a large portion of plastic waste is leaked into our rivers and oceans. Rather than trying to resolve the fallibility of the recycling process, Wang and Yao are going right to the source of the issue by inventing recycling for the least recyclable plastic.How plastic worksTo understand the process, you need to know about Polyethylene. This plastic compound makes up over a third of all plastics produced globally. The reason it canât breakdown in the environment is because of its size â" itâs so large that microbes cannot access it to break it down organically.According to Wang, using our societyâs âcurrent Mechanical recycling method, all of the plastics are mechanically broken down, washed, and melted. Thatâs like taking a tree leaf, cutting it apart and then gluing it together. Thatâs why recycling is not working.âInstead, working from the concept of a âcircular economyâ, the chemists plan to take these molecules and fully recycle them to create new usable products, rather than releasing waste into the atmosphere.Yao breaks down this highly complex method into simpler terms:âWhat we do is use a chemical method to cut this [Polyethylene] chain into small pieces. These small pieces become functionalized with oxygen to develop interesting properties. These chemicals that we make out of plastic are actually precursors to h igher value materials. Itâs this exact material that is found in things like car parts, electronics, and textiles.âUsing this model, the vast majority of waste ( 91% ) that are deemed too contaminated to recycle actually becomes an untapped resource with unprecedented application potential. Rather than trying to fix a broken system, Wang and Yao are inventing their own.What you can do nowEven if you arenât a precocious chemist, there are still many ways you can help combat the plastic crisis. The simplest way to do so is to cut back on plastic waste altogether. Today, technology makes this easier than ever. One app, from a startup called Omni Calculator, helps you keep track of your plastic waste by tallying up how many plastic bottles you use, and then telling you roughly how many pounds of plastic you use in a year or that youâll use in your lifetime.Another app, called My Little Plastic Footprint, goes further, helping users track their progress toward zero waste over tim e. According to Wang, itâs important to remain radically optimistic about combating the plastic crisis, on an international level. âWe are convinced that we can solve the plastic pollution problem within our lifetime, itâs just a matter of working with the right people to make it happen,â says Wang.You might also enjoy⦠New neuroscience reveals 4 rituals that will make you happy Strangers know your social class in the first seven words you say, study finds 10 lessons from Benjamin Franklinâs daily schedule that will double your productivity The worst mistakes you can make in an interview, according to 12 CEOs 10 habits of mentally strong people
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