Livescience_2014 00297.txt

#Earth-Friendly Packaging Made of Organic Mushroom Parts Most of today's gadgets and gizmos are packed with plastic and Styrofoam that take eons to decompose. On top of that these packing materials are derived often from petroleum. But an innovative company is trying to change that with a little help from a common pizza topping: mushrooms. Biomaterials company Ecovative Design figured out a way to create protective packaging insulation and ceiling tiles that are made without using petroleum and decompose after use. This eliminates pollution and waste at nearly every part of the plastics supply chain. How do they do it? First agricultural waste like cornhusks and cottonseed hulls are ground up and mixed with mycelium the root systems of mushrooms. The mixture is poured then into a mold and left to sit in the dark for a few days. The mycelium spreads throughout the mixture binding it together in a strong web just like it would in soil. Customers won t have to fret about receiving a moldy plasma TV because the final step is to bake the now-solid mushroom material stopping the growth process. The end result is a completely biodegradable packing material that is safe to chuck in your garden or compost pile. The process may seem a little crazy at first and that s just what some of Eben Bayer and Gavin Mcintyre s fellow students at Rensselaer Polytechnic institute thought too. But their professor encouraged them to continue their research setting up shop in in Rennselaer s Business Incubator after graduating. Bayer and Mcintyre soon co-founded Ecovative Design and focused on creating mycelium-based wall insulation but in 2009 they shifted their attention to launching mushroom packaging commercially. By 2011 the packaging was being used by companies like Dell and Crate & Barrel replacing thousands of plastic foam packing parts that would have ended otherwise up in the garbage. Today the material has won Ecovative a host of awards including the Environmental protection agency s Environmental Quality Award and Richard Branson s Screw Business As usual Award. Follow Livescience@livescience Facebook & Google


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