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DIN BS:EN 13432 |
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Plastic products can provide proof of their compostability by successfully meeting the harmonised European standard, EN 13432. The European Packaging Directive 94/62 EC makes reference hereto with regard to compliance with recovery directives. |
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Today, the terms biodegradation, biodegradable materials, Compostability, etc.
are very common, but frequently misused, and are, consequently, a source of
misunderstanding. The European norm EN 13432 "Requirements for packaging
recoverable through composting and biodegradation - "Testing scheme and
evaluation criteria for the final acceptance of packaging", which has also been
recently adopted in Italy, as EN 13432, resolves this problem by defining the
characteristics that a material must have in order to be defined as
"Compostable". This norm is a reference point for material manufacturers, public
authorities, composters and consumers. Biodegradability, which is determined by measuring the actual metabolic conversion of the compostable material into carbon dioxide. This property is quantitatively measured using the standard test method, EN 14046 (which is also published as ISO 14855: biodegradability under controlled composting conditions). The acceptance level is 90%, which must be reached in less than 6 months. Disintegrability, that is, the fragmentation and loss of visibility in the final compost (absence of visual contamination). This is measured with a composting test (EN 14045). The test material is degraded, together with organic waste, for 3 months. After this time, the compost is sieved with a 2 mm sieve. The residues of test material with dimensions higher than 2 mm are considered as not having disintegrated. This fraction must be less than 10% of the initial mass.
Absence of negative
effects on the composting process. This is checked with a composting test. Scope of testing under EN 13432
Each of these points is necessary
for the definition of compostability, but these alone are not sufficient. For
example, a biodegradable material is not necessarily Compostable because it must
also break up during one composting cycle. On the other hand, a material that
breaks up, over one composting cycle, into microscopic pieces that are not
totally biodegradable, is not Compostable. OXO degradable materials fall into
this category, and are also toxic with a Cobalt 13 additive.
"Mater-Bi® contains vegetable origin
components, such as starch, + |
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