WELCOME TO THE ETEE CLUB

Dissolvable Plastic | Should We Use it in Our Products?

When we develop products, we stick to these 3 principles:

  1. It has to biodegrade (that means it will decompose into reusable nutrients)
  2. It has to have an eco certification (meaning the ingredients that make our products are 3rd party accredited, so they are best in class for you and our planet)
  3. It’s gotta be plastic free (both to reduce the carbon footprint and, again, to biodegrade)

When we started developing our plastic free liquid dish soap, we wrestled with what plastic alternatives we could use to store it.

The first option we explored was PVOH, PVA, or PVAL - otherwise known as Polyvinyl alcohol.  

PVA/PVOH gained popularity with Dishwasher pods and has since been used to contain a variety of Dishwasher, Laundry detergents and Shampoos for a number of ‘eco brands’, including both 'pods' and also 'laundry sheets', which are becoming increasingly popular.  

PVA/PVOH is technically 'plastic' because it is pliable - bendy and stretchy - but it's not the same plastic as a plastic bag because of what happens to it when it contacts water.

Many companies claim PVA/PVOH is ‘biodegradable’, but when we started digging deeper, this ‘eco-claim’ wasn't so cut and dry.

Why?

PVOH DOESN’T ‘BIODEGRADE’ IT ‘DISSOLVES’

In our research, PVOH does not biodegrade so much as it dissolves into a "non-harmful" monomer, and while those molecules can biodegrade, the time it takes for them to actually biodegrade is a little foggy.  Years, decades, 100 years or more?  Our research wasn't able to provide any conclusive timelines. 

Advocates for PVOH say this is not a problem and it’s a lot better than having mounds of 'solid' plastic floating around the ocean, but it still is leaving ‘something’ behind.  We just don't yet know the impact - if any - of having increasing amounts of these molecules floating around our waterways.  That said, our research to date does not suggest that those molecules are what we you would think of as 'micro-plastics'.

PVOH IS OIL BASED = NOT CARBON NEUTRAL

The other challenge with PVOH is that it is derived from petrochemicals (oil based and therefore against dev principal 2).  That said, right now, it's really hard to avoid petrochemicals - hence why we are in the climate crisis we are currently in - because even most 'plant based' cleaners (including our own) contain small amounts of petrochemicals.  

 

WHY BEESWAX PODS?

Given the unknowns about biodegradation, long term impacts and the reliance on petrochemicals, we chose not to use PVA/PVOH and instead developed our own pod made from all natural materials.  Materials we were already familiar with from our other products - beeswax, soy wax and naturally occurring oils and resins.


What’s great about natural materials is that you don’t need a pile of research to figure out if they decompose - you can just toss them in the earth and know they'll go away.

BUT THERE'S A FLIP SIDE TO OUR BEESWAX PODS
  1. They cost moreR&D is time consuming and expensive.  We are still in the early stages of developing our pods and there are many improvements to be made - both from the design/materials and the manufacturing - and so that means we can't make them as cheaply as their PVA/PVOH counterparts.
  2. There is still 'waste': While the pods are natural and they can be repurposed, reused and composted, there is still 'waste' left behind.  PVOH on the other hand just dissolves.

When it comes to 'price', we did come up with a work around through the Plastic Free Club, but we feel that if we really want to make a change, we need to hit the MASSES and that requires a major drop in the price.  

And this has led us back to a core question.  Should we re-visit PVA/PVOH?

It’s definitely a step forward from traditional plastic, and we're already exploring an improvement that could see a similar film made without oil, but that is a couple years out (at best).  In the meantime, we are left deciding:

SHOULD WE CONTINUE TO DEVELOP OUR OWN ‘WAX SOAP-PODS’ OR SHOULD WE INCORPORATE PVOH?  JOIN THE CONVERSATION, COMMENT BELOW.

← Older Post Newer Post →


Comments


  • I can see the dilemma. Stick to your plastic free purpose or hit more people and reduce the footprint with a better product than currently used. I personally value everything plastic free – but do use the pods for my dishwasher soap. I could just as easily use wax containers to hydrate the soap in another container – but it would have to be easier to pour. Powders are problematic with the residue.

    I hope this helps.

    Leta on
  • Because we humans create without knowing the repercussions, (disposing the waste as in single use plastic, all batteries, nuclear waste, etc), I vote no. I’m thinking the dish soap pod goes into the jar and water is added. The residue on dishes IF not rinsed thoroughly could be ingested. What about down the drain and into the ocean? How do you know it’s safer than single use plastic? Just because it’s invisible doesn’t make it safer. I’ve gotten broken wax soap tubes. I understand that issue. But I won’t buy pods. Thank you for all you are trying to do! You are awesome.

    Angie Bell on
  • Would you drink the water after dissolving PVO/PVOH in it? As you say, it dissolves, but it does not biodegrade. I would rather pay a little more and stick to the beeswax.

    Frances Herzer on
  • My opinion would be to not include plastic in any way, at all costs.

    Hannah on
  • Keep digging? Hemp based? Dissolved plastic sound awful. What about the stuff that dissolves that’s rice that people use for padding/ packages? Capsules that medicines use, bamboo for storing? Maybe send containers back in box that was shipped. Box gets used twice, products get refilled and reused. Paper that dissolves but the inside is coated with an algal based water repellant. I’m no R&D scientist but I bet one or two variations of the suggestions I and others give may work.

    Loi M on


Leave a comment

Please note, comments must be approved before they are published