EU-funded researchers now say they have a solution that will protect foods from contamination and retain freshness by replacing petrochemical material with a coating produced from dairy byproducts.
Klaus Noller of the Fraunhofer Institute for Process Engineering and Packaging said yesterday (11 January) the discovery “finally means the end” to the oxygen-blocking packaging films that are difficult to recycle and not biodegradable.
EU seeks to cut packaging waste
The development is a potential boost to European policies aimed at shifting to recyclable and biodegradable materials and to EU pledges to eliminate landfilling by 2020 - goals that now appear unachievable in several member states.
The EU’s Waste Framework Directive requires national governments to produce waste-reduction plans by 12 December 2013. The Packaging and Packaging Waste Directive sets standards and recycling targets.
The key ingredient in the Fraunhofer Institute’s packaging material is whey - the watery milk resulting during the formation of curd in cheesemaking.
Noller said his team used powered whey powder and formulated it into a wet coating that is applied - “like a lacquer” - to seal the clear cover of food containers. The seal blocks oxygen and moisture that can contaminate meats and prepared foods.
The material is as effective as current petrochemcial-based polymers and can be commercially developed at roughly the same price, Noller said. The one drawback is that so far the researchers have not been able to apply the whey coating to moulded cartons made of plastic or other material.
The German institute worked with dairy producers, packaging companies and recyclers over the past three years to produce what Noller says is a product that could begin to replace non-biodegradable materials within two years. A pilot project is already underway in Slovenia, he said.
Unlike non-renewable materials, the whey-based sealant is easily dissolved so plastic or other wrap can be recycled, the Fraunhofer researcher said.
The ‘wheylayer’ project received €3.3 million through the European Union’s framework programme and involved collaborators from Germany, Hungary, Slovenia, Italy, Spain and Ireland.
In Germany alone, 640 square kilometres of packaging using petrochemical polymers will be produced in 2014 - enough to cover the Alpine Lake Constance bordered by Germany, Switzerland and Austria.




COMMENTS
This is not at all new.
We have been making packaging materials out of Lactic Acid and making it suitable for allowing molecular oxygen to pass through it for years.
Something is wrong here.
This has become published again.
This is definitely not new. Any company integrating its technology in the preparation of any Biomass to the manufacture of Biofuels - such as Ethanol as in the reports about Food Waste responded to by genesyst last week will have a surplus of product to do this. It does not have to come from cows.
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