Researchers Go Bananas Over Plant Fibers in Plastics

Plastics & Rubber Weekly
10/01/2009

Media Contact: Richard Higgs
Email: richardhiggs@macdream.net

A team of specialists at Queen's University Belfast is pioneering a technique to use banana plantation waste from the Canary Islands in the manufacture of rotationally molded plastic products.

The process of incorporating treated banana plant fibers in plastic molding is expected not only to reduce substantially the amount of polyethylene required, but also create jobs and benefit the environment, according to the university.

Its Polymer Processing Research Center (PPRC), which has developed significant expertise in rotomolding, is playing a key role in the EU-funded 1 million euro ($1.45 million) Badana Project. The study also involves companies in Spain, the United Kingdom, Germany, the Netherlands and Eastern Europe.

Around 20 percent of all bananas consumed in Europe are produced in Spain's Canary Islands, with 10 million banana plants grown annually in the island of Gran Canaria alone. When the fruit is harvested, the remains of the plant goes to waste. An estimated 25,000 metric tonnes of this natural plant fiber is dumped in ravines around the islands each year.

The plastics study was born after one of the Canaries' biggest banana plantation cooperatives approached a local university asking if something constructive could be done with the industry's waste products.

Queen's was asked to participate in the study because of its rotomolding expertise and close links with Spanish universities including those of Zaragoza and Las Palmas.

The project aims to make use of the plant material to improve a range of rotomolded products from wheelie bins and oil tanks through to plastic dolls, traffic cones and boats.

"Banana plant fibers will be processed, treated and added to a mix of plastic material, and sandwiched between two thin layers of pure plastic providing excellent structural properties. The project gives a whole new meaning to banana sandwich," said Mark Kearns, rotomolding manager at PPRC.

He was confident the project's success would "usher in a new and more sustainable era in the production of rotationally molded products". It will also benefit the plantations financially from the sale of waste from millions of banana plants which would otherwise go to waste.

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