It's In the Bag! Teenager Wins Science Fair, Solves...
Rated • 33 reviews • environment, biodegradable • discovermagazine.com
If you can't remember a cloth bag,
always choose paper bags, they are renewable and biodegradable
Weâ€ve all heard the plastic bag horror storiesâ€"the billions of bags discarded every year that wind up polluting oceans, killing wildlife and getting dumped in landfills where they take up to 1,000 years to decompose. Researchers have been wracking their brains for years to figure out a solution. But leave it to a Canadian high school student to leave them all in the dust. Daniel Burd, an 11th grader at Waterloo Collegiate Institute, has discovered a way to make plastic bags degrade in as little as three monthsâ€"a finding that won him first prize at the Canada-Wide Science Fair, a $20,000 scholarship, and a chance to revolutionize a major environmental issue.
Burdâ€s strategy was simple: Since plastic does eventually degrade, it must be eaten by microorganisms. If those microorganisms, as well as the optimal conditions for their growth, could be identified, we could put them to work eating the plastic much faster than under normal conditions.




