UC San Diego research lab to make environmentally friendly flip flops
from algae
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[August 18, 2020]
By Mike Blake
(Reuters) - Researchers at University of
California, San Diego hope to make future beach visits both
environmentally and fashion-friendly, with a new formula for
biodegradable flip flops.
Mike Burkart, professor of chemistry and biochemistry at the public
research university in San Diego, California, has developed a polymer
from algae, which decomposes naturally.
"We begin by growing algae and we grow them in raceway ponds where we
can grow them up to very high density," said Burkart during a tour of
the a lab for Reuters. "At that point when they are fully grown, we take
the water out of them...and basically we're able to get the algae down
to a very viscous paste."
"Then what we do is extract all the lipids out of that algae and it's
those lipids that we're making our materials out of," he said.
The laboratory initially made gasoline from algae before turning its
attention to surfboards, and now the humble flip flop.
"Almost every major shoe manufacturer has come to talk to us about the
possibility of using our materials in their products," Burkart said.
The simple footwear is affordable and popular around the world, and
therefore makes up a significant portion of discarded plastics polluting
oceans and seas. But Burkart is hoping his algae-based shoe-wear will
change that.
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Researchers at a laboratory in San Diego are hoping to make your
next beach visit environmentally friendly, developing a formula for
biodegradable flip flops made from algae.
"We're also talking to other companies, for example, for things like
food packaging or other types of materials that we don't want to
live forever in the environment," Burkart said.
"We really want those to be able to decompose or be able to be
recycled," he said.
(Reporting by Mike Blake; Editing by Diane Craft)
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