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PepsiCo Unveils World's First Entirely Plant-Based PET Bottle (PHOTO)

AP/The Huffington Post  
First Posted: 03/15/11 01:59 PM ET Updated: 05/25/11 07:40 PM ET

PURCHASE, N.Y. (AP) -- Remember the Cola Wars? Get ready for the Bottle Wars.

PepsiCo Inc. on Tuesday unveiled a bottle made entirely of plant material, which it says bests the technology of competitor Coca-Cola and reduces its potential carbon footprint.

The bottle is made from switch grass, pine bark, corn husks and other materials. Ultimately, Pepsi plans to also use orange peels, oat hulls, potato scraps and other leftovers from its food business.

The new bottle looks, feels and protects the drink inside exactly the same as its current bottles, said Rocco Papalia, senior vice president of advanced research at PepsiCo. "It's indistinguishable."

PepsiCo says it is the world's first bottle of a common type of plastic called PET made entirely of plant-based materials. Coca-Cola Co. currently produces a bottle using 30 percent plant-based materials and recently estimated it would be several years before it has a 100 percent plant bottle that's commercially viable.

"We've cracked the code," said Papalia.

The discovery potentially changes the industry standard for plastic packaging. Traditional plastic, called PET, is used in beverage bottles, food pouches, coatings and other common products.

The plastic is the go-to because it's lightweight and shatter-resistant, its safety is well-researched and it doesn't affect flavors. It is not biodegradable or compostable. But it is fully recyclable, a characteristic both companies maintain in their new creations.

Traditional PET plastic is made using fossil fuels, like petroleum, a limited resource that's rising in price. By using plant material instead, companies reduce their environmental impact. Pepsi says the new plastic will cost about the same as traditional plastic.

The company, based in Purchase, N.Y., said it has had dozens of people working on the process for years. While PepsiCo wouldn't specify the cost to research and design the new bottle, Papalia said it is in the millions of dollars.

It's one of several steps PepsiCo has taken recently to reduce its environmental impact. The company created a fully compostable bag for its SunChips line. It cut the amount of plastic in its Aqua-Fina bottle in 2009. And its Naked Juice line is in the midst of switching to a bottle made entirely of recycled plastic bottles.

PepsiCo says of its 19 biggest brands, those that generate more than $1 billion in revenue, 11 are beverage brands that use PET. The company says the packaging will cost roughly the same as it does today.

PepsiCo plans to test the product in 2012 in a few hundred thousand bottles. Once the company is sure it can successfully produce the bottle at that scale, it will begin converting all its products over.

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PURCHASE, N.Y. (AP) -- Remember the Cola Wars? Get ready for the Bottle Wars. PepsiCo Inc. on Tuesday unveiled a bottle made entirely of plant material, which it says bests the technology of compet...
PURCHASE, N.Y. (AP) -- Remember the Cola Wars? Get ready for the Bottle Wars. PepsiCo Inc. on Tuesday unveiled a bottle made entirely of plant material, which it says bests the technology of compet...
 
 
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10:19 PM on 03/21/2011
This is a greenwash. They're taking compostable organics -- nature's own fertilizer -- and creating a synthetic that won't fully break down even after 1,000 years. Plus, the plastics lobby itself argues that petro-plastic is made from natural gas byproducts of oil drilling -- stuff that would otherwise be flared off or go to waste. Plant-based plastic doesn't cut petroleum/fossil-fuel use in any meaningful way.

Worse, plastic "recycling" is a downward spiral. Go to a grocery store. Look at the thousands of #1 PET soda/water/juice bottles there. Find one that says "made using recycled PET." Good luck. Plastic is junk; it can be kicked down the road a cycle or two, then it becomes too uneconomical to make anything out of. But the industry uses a "100% recyclable" buzzword and even journalists now buy it without digging deeper. Frustrating.

Go to NAPCOR, the #1 PET industry's own website. Using their own reports, you can see within seconds that the majority of "recycled" #1 plastic is being dumped on developing nations, to be turned into junk packaging. Closing the loop? Madness.

Taking the earth's own nourishment and turning it into tons of garbage that'll live on for 1000 years is not green. It's folly.

The reality of this achievement is that, even if we wean ourselves off fossil fuels, corps will now still be able to churn out millions of tons of non-degradable, faux-recyclable plastics to collect in parks, rivers, & oceans. Business as usual.
09:06 PM on 03/20/2011
Check out Cereplast. They've been working on this for a couple of years now.
11:13 PM on 03/19/2011
If its chemically the same, does it really matter what it's derived from..I Have a friend that sells grocery supplies talk about this organic meat additive..Essentially a sodium nitrate but they made it by cooking down tones of veggies..Same chemical structure same function.But for some reason you can label it Nitrate free?You just cooked all the veggies down and got the fertilizer used to feed the plant...Really inefficient..
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Harvee Wallbanger
Republicans... I got no use for you.
12:47 AM on 03/19/2011
Its just plastic made from plant material. It's still plastic. It's a gimmick that does nothing in the end to get rid of plastic bottles.

Now if you could drink the contents and then eat the bottle, that would be something. Pop bottle stew...
01:22 PM on 03/21/2011
I agree. While it does address a problem with using fossil fuels and oil dependency, it does not address the problem of plastics in landfills or in the ocean.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
b525
09:15 PM on 03/18/2011
Seems like a good idea, plant/agribusiness scraps, at least these are indigenous materials and not made from imported foreign oil that supports oil dictatorships/abuse of Muslim/arab women.

As long as they continue to use SCRAPS it should be OK.....but if they start leveling pine forests and using crops, instead of crop SCRAPS, it might become a big problem.

At least they executives at Pepsi have on their green thinking caps.

I'd like to see them eliminate aluminum cans, Alcoa and other companies who mine and smelt aluminum have built, and lobbied to build, river eco-system destroying mega-dams all over Africa and other parts of the world to provide hydro-electricity to smelt aluminum. One aluminum smelter can use as much electricity, per year, as a large city.

If you look at a map of Ghana you''ll see a dam reservoir that covers much of the country, it was reportedly built by a company that eventually became Alcoa. This enormous dam, after it was built, stagnated the entire Volta River, flooded out tens of thousands of people/drowned villages and brought so much stagnant water to Ghana/the Volta River that waves of malaria and stagnant water parasites have plagued Ghana ever since. Thye dam reservoir is filled with shistomasias infected snails and the people of Ghana avoid touching/bathing in the reservoir water and must filter their water before drinking or get infected with deadly parasites.

Thanks Alcoa.

Pre-damming these diseases were less.
11:16 AM on 03/17/2011
"By using plant material instead, companies reduce their environmental impact."

I smell baloney. Old process - convert hydrocarbons into a non-degradable PET plastic on a massive scale. New process - convert hydrocarbons into a non-degradable PET plastic on a massive scale. How is this reducing environmental impact again?

I'm curious about the agricultural consequences of converting a massive global bottling enterprise over to plant based materials.

Don't be fooled by the spin. If you want to help the environment, stay away from processed food products and anything bottled for your convenience.
11:36 AM on 03/17/2011
I wouldn't drink the stuff if you gave me a truckload. Believe it or not, there was a time when people didn't run around screwed onto a soda bottle or sucking on a can. It's the power of advertising.
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HazelPethigFan
I don't know until I know
08:50 AM on 03/20/2011
Ever notice Whole Foods and Traders Joes are filled with exactly what you tell us to stay away from: "stay away from processed food products and anything bottled for your convenience."
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
sensimilla
Lead with your heart, and your mind will follow...
11:11 AM on 03/17/2011
take a product group which singlehandedly is responsible for causing MILLIONS of people to have diabetes around the world...and slap it in a biobottle..

typical American Corporate thinking.

STOP DRINKING HFCS!
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HouseProletariat
Placing the Petit-bourgeois in propper perspective
10:47 AM on 03/17/2011
PET production represents an incredibly small percentage of our dependence upon oil. Furthermore, as many others have commented, PET is PET. It is just as environmentally irresponsible for PepsiCo to flood the marketplace with these containers as it was their old ones. This event is only good news for the executives at PepsiCo, who are probably planning for the future exponential rise in oil prices.
MWA1111
I'll let you set the tone for our conversation
10:47 AM on 03/17/2011
Why is it the headline says entirely plant based but the body says 30%?

Secondly, I may not be an engineer in this field but have heard about this and find it promising:

http://ecologic-llc.com
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camanokat
Outta this world
02:02 PM on 03/17/2011
Pepsi= 100% plant based
Coca cola= 30%

Read it again.
MWA1111
I'll let you set the tone for our conversation
07:35 PM on 03/17/2011
Sorry, missed that. (obviously) thank you.
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FreedToChoose
...lest my wife says I'm not.
10:21 AM on 03/17/2011
My hope is for a bottle made from tortilla chips and salsa.
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camanokat
Outta this world
11:03 PM on 03/17/2011
Bet it goes great with Afghani Goo or Orange Kush!
10:18 AM on 03/17/2011
Jeeeze People,
At least it's a step in the right direction.

Anyone that didn't vote in the Mid-Terms -
Has no right to comment here.
The inmates have taken over the asylum and if you didn't vote - it's partially your fault.

We're currently going back to the 1920's level of wide open churn and burn pollution,
because we now have a Congress full of "God loves Polluters" members. .
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Harvee Wallbanger
Republicans... I got no use for you.
12:54 AM on 03/19/2011
There ain't no global climate change they say. And I hate to burst your bubble. This is just plastic made from plant material. The impact will be similar to mixing ethanol in gasoline. It will raise the cost of food everywhere...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
rosey7
11:44 PM on 03/19/2011
Smatch, Fanned and faved, It's a step in the right direction !I've always wondered why they didn't have food containers for fast food and bottles that were bio degradable. Made from scraps- good. It will be good for business too because most people like the idea of every day things ending up in land fills.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
henrypapillon
Put a Psychiatrist in every NRA meeting.
10:09 AM on 03/17/2011
But is the bottle biodegradable once manufactured. The article never addresses that. And as to the Sun Chips, that bag, according to Bill Maher, was discontinued after people complained that it was noisy.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
NVRSLPS
Designer
10:29 AM on 03/17/2011
Sun Chips discontinued the bag for all flavors except original
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/03/01/sunchips-biodegradable-bag_n_829165.html
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camanokat
Outta this world
02:03 PM on 03/17/2011
It said it is NOT biodegradable but is 100% recyclable.

READ the article.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
henrypapillon
Put a Psychiatrist in every NRA meeting.
12:45 AM on 03/18/2011
WELL, EXCUUUUUSE MEEEE !   Geez, somebody needs a weekend...or a nap!
democles
swords-r-us
09:54 AM on 03/17/2011
It is not biodegradable. Nice.
09:44 AM on 03/17/2011
This is great to hear. Although I am not a soda drinker, millions of people are. And if this helps our environment in any way, which it sounds like it may, than I'm all for it.

I did hear that they discontinued making the compostable Sun Chips bags because it was too noisy (thank you, Bill Maher). They should seriously reconsider.
democles
swords-r-us
09:55 AM on 03/17/2011
Doesn't help the environment much at all, but it's good advertising.
09:10 AM on 03/17/2011
This is strictly a marketing ploy. I predict it'll go over about as well as their idiotic logo rebrand.

The components of the new bottle sound more appetizing than the contents . . . high fructose corn syrup is killing us.

And while I enjoy the aesthetics of the old glass bottles, aluminum cans are still more "green".
democles
swords-r-us
09:56 AM on 03/17/2011
Precisely. It is the USDA, FDA and farmers who producing poisons so that bit pharma can make money from all the sick people.