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I bought canvas bags from my grocery store which are made of polypropylene. They are meant to replace plastic bags and therefore I would assume be less polluting. But is polypropylene biodegradable?

2007-08-12 09:44:33 · 5 answers · asked by Laurence L 2 in Environment Conservation

5 answers

no it is not biodegrable. it is photodegradable meaning it breaks down into smaller pieces by the suns uv rays but other than that no. polypropylene is a type of plastic which is bag for the environment but since u bought the one that is reusable i guess its better than using up 100 disposable plastic bags.
on a side note: i wouldnt called the polypropylene bag "canvas bags" because canvas bags would use cotton to make them. just to let u know.

2007-08-12 21:58:26 · answer #1 · answered by SouthParkRocks 5 · 0 0

I would use a service personally. I used a service for the first 6 months with each of my children ( I lived in different countries for each of them and found services in all 3 places) Then I bought the reusable ones and did the wash myself. My daughter now 2, as of yesterday, is potty trained during the day and we are only using a nappy at night...even though she has always woke up dry. Biodegradable will be nice and easy, but cloth makes them potty train quicker...it is also cheaper to use cloth I paid $230.00 US dollars and I was done for the rest of my time. If I buy biodegradable or organic disposable I pay $17.00 a week to 10 days. Will not take long for the $$$ to add up. Good luck with your decision.

2016-05-20 23:24:50 · answer #2 · answered by ? 3 · 0 0

Yes, it is. But the reason they are trying to replace plastic bags is because the plastic bags end up in landfills. The plastic then leaches chemicals into the groundwater and, also, releases methane (a greenhouse gas) into the atmosphere from the landfill. Plastics are always bad news!

2007-08-12 16:33:49 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Polypropylene IS itself a plastic.
No, it does not biodegrade. Yes, it does disintegrate under sun's UV if directly exposed.

2007-08-12 19:45:23 · answer #4 · answered by A.V.R. 7 · 1 0

Yes, but it takes tens of thousands of years. And, because the material is pretty inert, the biodegradation will need to be assisted by erosion.

2007-08-12 13:03:49 · answer #5 · answered by jdkilp 7 · 0 0

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