Business is booming.

London-based startup replaces plastics with products from seaweed and onion skins

Hauwa Ali

London-based startup called Notpla  Not Plastic for short, is creating a type of biodegradable packaging made from seaweed and onion skins to replace plastic packaging.
The company, which in December was among the winners of the second annual environmental Earthshot Prize in Boston, is one of a number of businesses hoping to profit from the growing unpopularity of plastic.
The British government has just unveiled a far-reaching ban on single-use plastic to combat a worsening pollution problem.
Much of the plastic discarded by the public winds up in rivers, streams and oceans, where it can remain for centuries, choking wildlife and ruining natural habitats. The British ban will mostly affect takeaway food outlets in England by prohibiting plates, trays, bowls and cutlery made of plastic, as well as certain types of polystyrene cups.
Seaweed has been around for billions of years, and so nature recognizes the structure and is able to break it down readily, Notplas commercial director, Tristan Kaye, told Marketplace during a recent tour of the companys small factory in the East End of London.
If our materials find their way into the natural environment, nature will be able to break them down, he said.
The process usually takes only a few weeks. Its believed that plastic, on the other hand, never fully decomposes. 
The company is making three basic products in its small factory: seaweed-coated cardboard boxes for food retailers, seaweed film for wrapping food or cosmetics, and small sachets containing a drink, like water, alcohol or fruit juice. You just pop the sachet into your mouth and chew. The seaweed itself has been rendered tasteless, but its perfectly edible.
One of Notplas flavorless, edible seaweed sachets.
Its also plentiful and comparatively cheap, said Notpla co-founder Rodrigo Garcia.
It doesnt need farmland. It doesnt need freshwater. It doesnt need fertilizer. It doesnt need too much human intervention. It grows in the sea, and you just leave it to grow. Theres so much of it, it would be really hard to run out of seaweed, he said.
Seaweed isnt the only alternative to plastic. Another small British company is using palm leaves, and another uses bamboo. Meanwhile, Renuka Ramanujam, a designer based in Scotland, has hit on perhaps the most curious replacement material for plastic wrapping: onion skins.
Theyre robust and they contain all sorts of natural waxes that make them ideal for packaging, Ramanujam said. And they have antimicrobial components in them and antioxidants that will help keep food fresh. That could be really helpful in reducing food waste by extending supermarket shelf life. So for packaging, that could be absolutely huge.
Her company, Huid, is still at the research and development stage, but Ramanujam reckons shell have a prototype by the end of the year.
Notpla and its seaweed products are much further along, with a staff of around 70. According to Rodrigo Garcia, it has paying customers in eight European countries.Garcia hopes Notpla breaks even before it burns through whats left of its $19 million worth of capital in 18 months time. But ultimately  whether its seaweed, onion skins, bamboo or palm leaves alternative packaging has some way to go. 
According to the Earth Day environmental campaign, the world produced 580 billion plastic bottles in 2021 and used 5 trillion plastic bags last year.

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