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RE: Scientists manage to transform corn into plastic, inspired by spider silk/Científicos logran transformar el maíz en plástico inspirándose en la seda de araña

in Popular STEM9 days ago

Turning leftovers from corn processing into something useful is a smart move. The concept of "weaving" the plant proteins so they behave like spider silk—making it tough instead of brittle—is brilliant. It actually makes sense. Plus, having a wrapper that rots away in the dirt within a month instead of sitting in a landfill for the next five hundred years is a massive win.

But let’s be real for a minute. We've seen this kind of "miracle material" story pop up a million times before, and usually, it just vanishes. The real test is always the money and the scale. It's easy enough to make a perfect little sheet of "plantimer" in a fancy lab with a team of top researchers watching over it. It is a completely different ball game to manufacture millions of tonnes of the stuff in a factory without the costs going through the roof.

If this is ever going to replace the cheap oil-based plastic in our local supermarkets, it needs to be just as cheap to make. Otherwise, big companies won't care. I really hope they figure it out because the planet is drowning in plastic waste, but I’m keeping my expectations firmly on the ground until I actually see my supermarket shopping wrapped in it. Cool post, thanks for sharing.

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