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Research has shown that under optimal conditions (such as an industrial compost center), this plastic will degrade in 45-100 days. However, when poly(lactic acid) plastics are disposed in the trash and sent to the city landfill, the plastic won't degrade any faster than any other plastic, which is estimated to be at least hundreds of years. This is because heat, sunlight and oxygen are required for the decomposition of the poly(lactic acid) and it is difficult for sunlight and oxygen to penetrate the tons of soil and thick plastic liners of a landfill. It is also difficult to achieve the required composting conditions in the compost pile in ones backyard. Because of these difficulties in achieving optimum conditions, some stores selling products packaged in containers made of poly(lactic acid) have a program where customers can bring their used containers back to the store for the appropriate composting, rather than throw them in a landfill with the rest of the trash.
There are other issues with turning corn into plastics besides disposal. Some people question whether we should be using food products (corn) to produce materials or if it is more responsible to use it to feed people. Also, it is unclear how much energy it takes to grow, harvest and process the corn to produce the polymer and then eventually recycle it. Some scientists have argued that it is actually more energy efficient to just use petroleum resources to produce plastics as, overall, this process might produce less greenhouse gasses such as CO2 and consume less energy. One could also question why we need so many disposable containers that are only used for an hour or two and then disposed of in the landfill to sit for hundreds of years.
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