Janet L.
Scott
*a and
Jacquetta
Lee
b
aCentre for Sustainable Chemical Technologies and Department of Chemistry, University of Bath, Bath, BA2 7AY, UK. E-mail: j.l.scott@bath.ac.uk
bCentre for Environment and Sustainability, University of Surrey, Guildford, GU2 7XH, UK. E-mail: j.lee@surrey.ac.uk
To illustrate the concept of appropriate lifetimes, coupled to end-of-function considerations, we consider two large classes of chemical substances that are in wide use, in a plethora of applications and products: surfactants and organic polymers (as used in ‘plastics’).
While biodegradation of the surfactant itself is important, the principle requires innocuous degradation products and even before this principle appeared in print, it had been recognized that breakdown products from alkylphenol ethoxylates (APEs) were more toxic to aquatic organisms than the parent APEs – indeed, nonylphenol is ca. 10× more toxic than its ethoxylate precursor and is an oestrogen mimic.8,9
Clearly, there remains scope for designing effective, yet more readily degraded, surfactants that do not result in deleterious breakdown products, but an alternative strategy, that can be effective, is to replace significant quantities of surfactants with other materials. For example, dispersed, nanofibrillar oxidized cellulose can be used as a rheology modifier to generate stable reduced surfactant personal care products and emulsions (creams and lotions) with significantly reduced surfactant content.10,11 This example illustrates the potential for mitigation of harm, by considering the impact of the whole product rather than individual components.
Considering the life cycle of inherently single-use substances, such as surfactants, suggests that the most significant impacts are in the use phase.12,13 Given that impacts can occur at all stages of the life cycle, a systems approach, that includes all stages, is necessary to minimize overall impact. For products containing surfactants, LCA studies reveal that it is not always the chemical constituents of the formulated product itself that have maximum impact. For example, a recent analysis of six products using data provided by three large manufacturers (Henkel, Procter & Gamble, and Unilever): hand dishwashing detergent, compact powder and tablet laundry detergent, window glass trigger spray, bathroom trigger spray, acid toilet cleaner, and bleach toilet cleaner revealed that, for a number of the product classes, packaging had at least as great as, if not greater, impact than surfactant choice and quantity. Thus, transforming the packaging used could provide immediate environmental benefits, which leads to a discussion of the second class of chemical substance chosen as an exemplar: organic polymers.
Feedstocks for the production of polymers can be fossil-, bio- or waste-based (via bio-refining), and the products may be biodegradable, or persistent in the environment. Currently, the five most widely used commodity plastics – poly(propylene), poly(ethylene), poly(vinyl chloride), poly(styrene), and poly(ethylene terephthalate) – are largely produced from fossil oil and are not biodegradable. It is tempting to suggest that polymers for single use applications (e.g. food packaging) should be bio-based/made from bio-refined waste products, and be compostable, while selection of the base polymer for products designed for lengthy or multiple uses must be made on the basis of the longest possible life… but even this is too simplistic an approach!
What is needed is a life cycle approach to plastic use, to determine not only what is most technically appropriate, but also how the product is actually used and disposed of. For example, a plastic car bumper needs to be UV, moisture, and heat and cold resistant, coupled with strength and durability. Such an item has the potential to be reused in the designed form, rather than needing to be recycled to the base polymer and reformed, or bio-degraded. Clearly, in this case, the maximum value is returned when the bumper is taken from one vehicle and refitted to another (this assumes that car bumper design has not altered in the interim period) and this fits well within the context of the circular economy.
Packaging for items that require a level of security have a different function. Their function is completed when the items are removed, and indeed the packaging is no longer able to perform its function. In this case, there is value in being able to recycle the polymer, such that it can be reformed into new packaging. This is still within the ‘circular economy’, but has a higher associated energy cost and also assumes that the waste streams can be efficiently segregated and treated.
Consider the example of plastic bags. These items have been the subject of considerable attention over the recent years, with heated discussions ranging from whether the bags should be made of a non-biodegradable, durable plastic allowing multiple reuse of the bag, or biodegradable, single-use, thus ensuring that these eventually disappear when discarded. In isolation, a good technical case could be made for either of these options, but the best outcome depends on how the users of the bags actually behave. A consumer who disposes of a heavy duty plastic bag into general waste after just one use, is creating a waste that will remain intact in a landfill site for many years, and consuming more resources. A single-use biodegradable, or compostable, lightweight bag may use less resources and often has a second life as a waste bin bag before disposal in landfill. The drive to move away from landfilling towards anaerobic digestion of household waste also has influence here: heavy-duty, durable, multi-use bags cannot be composted, but could act as a feedstock for waste-to-energy conversion, while single-use, compostable bags can be digested, but have lower value as energy sources (as these are usually prepared from oxygenated polymers, with lower calorific value than hydrocarbons). Thus, waste policy influences the selection of the most appropriate type of bag for consumers to use, and should be determined by evaluating the costs and benefits in terms of resources consumed, as well as final end-of-life options.
This latter example illustrates the need for a holistic life cycle approach, which is inherently complicated. The complexity of analysing impacts without consideration of the systems within which these impacts occur, or those due to a single chemical component in a complex product, has led some to suggest that a cradle to gate approach is justified, but such reductionism must be avoided if truly greener chemical substances are to be designed. Meta-analyses, similar to those conducted in the medical sciences, could provide broad guidelines for whole classes of products.
Thus, the principle remains a valid guide, but cannot be used in isolation and certainly should not lead to the oversimplified conclusion that only biodegradable materials are ‘green’. A life cycle perspective is required to define appropriate lifetimes and fitting deaths. One answer to the question “what relevance does this principle have for today's (global) challenges?” is “it's a ‘wicked problem’15” and there is a need to also consider policy and regulation, which can rapidly shift the goalposts with regards to which substance offers the least impact over its entire life cycle.
This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry 2016 |