Crop growing and
harvesting
Starchextraction
Production of
intermediates products
Electricity
Biopolymer shaping
Biopolymer product
Use
Incineration Anaerobic digestion Landfill Composting Recycling
Material production
and use
Disposal & recovery
Energyexport to
the grid
Emissions from
landfill
Alternative use of
incineration
capacity
Processing
Marginal material
Ratio of virgin
material
subsitution
Co‐products
Heat/steam
Avoided material
production
Degradation rate
Compost use
Crude oil
Post‐consumer waste
Collection
Electricity
Marginal material
Co‐products
Heat/steam
Figure 24 The biopolymers system and key parameters
3.4.2 Comparison between the various end-of-life options
Alternatives compared
The end-of-life options covered by the selected studies are:
Recycling
Composting
Incineration with energy recovery
Incineration without energy recovery
Anaerobic digestion
Table 46 gives an overview of the alternatives that are compared within each case. It also illustrates how often
each end-of-life option is represented. It can be seen that incineration without energy recovery and anaerobic
digestion are analysed in one and two studies, respectively. In fact, incineration without energy recovery is no
longer common and will inevitably disappear in the near future. As anaerobic digestion is not a fully mature
option for biopolymers, very few studies could be found since little data is available about the technology. The
results obtained should thus be interpreted with care, especially as the number of cases is not sufficient to assess
the validity of the results. It should also be noted that in this chapter recycling refers to three types of recycling:
mechanical recycling, where plastics are shredded into pellets or granulates and serve as new raw
materials. This corresponds to the usual definition for recycling;
feedstock recycling, which is defined as a change in the chemical structure of the material, where the
resulting chemicals are used for a purpose other than producing the original material; and
chemical recycling, which implies a change in the chemical structure of the material, but in such a
way that the resulting chemicals can be used to produce the original material again (monomer
recovery).