| Dow Chemical Bets Big on Bioplastics 		     		     	                  			 			 				By 				Alex Planes 				 				| 				 More Articles August 30, 2011 				| 				 Comments (5)
 
 If The Graduate were made today, Mr. McGuire might not  be so keen on plastics. By now it's a mature industry, with 500 billion  pounds of the stuff produced every year. But hidden in that massive  trove is a segment that hopes to capture the same explosive growth  predicted back in 1967. Say it with me: "bioplastics."
 
 Setting up a sustainable shop
 Dow Chemical  (NYSE:  DOW   )   generates a significant portion of its earnings ($11.6 billion worth  of sales in 2010, or about a fifth of all revenue) through its plastics  division. The climbing costs of petroleum and a rising tide of  environmentalism have boosted interest in bioplastics. The concept is  hardly a new one, but bioplastic adoption has just begun to take off,  having been hampered in the past by a lack of scale and greater cost  efficiencies offered by petroleum-based plastic. However, Dow has found a  cost-effective answer in Brazil and plans to set up operations capable  of producing approximately 350,000 metric tons of sugarcane-derived  polyethylene per year. A drop in the global plastics bucket, but every  environmentally friendly drop is a good one, right?
 
 Since plastics only account for about 5% of total U.S. petroleum  consumption, it's unlikely that even a complete shift toward bioplastics  will devastate oil producers. Dow's shift toward bioplastics produces  at a lower cost (negating the need for pricey oil) by controlling the  entire chain of production, from the sugarcane field to the processing  plant. Its nearest (literally and professionally) direct competitor is  Brazil-based Braskem  (NYSE:  BAK   ) , which operates a similar sugarcane-based polyethylene plant with a production capacity of 200,000 metric tons.
 
 This is another dip in the pond for Dow, which previously tried to  develop a new corn-based bioplastic with Cargill but decided to abandon  the  partnership  and the product in 2005. Why? It's hard to get people to accept new  products, according to Luis Cirihal, Dow's executive in charge of the  new sugarcane project. After Dow walked away from the partnership,  Cargill doubled down on the corn-based bioplastic, renamed its  manufacturer NatureWorks LLC, and should soon expand its manufacturing  capabilities.
 
 Late to the party, but bringing lots of favors
 Dow's  polyethylene effort begins in the midst of what has been a huge rise in  bioplastic demand. Bioplastic consumption has increased by several  orders of magnitude since 2000, and total bioplastic production capacity  is expected to increase sixfold, to 2.1 million tons, by 2013. Despite  its late start, Dow's plans dwarf the capacities proposed by smaller  bioplastics rivals Cereplast  (Nasdaq:  CERP   )  and Metabolix  (Nasdaq:  MBLX   )  , which anticipate total production capacities of 88.4 million pounds  and 110 million pounds, respectively. To put that in perspective, Dow's  proposed 350,000 metric ton capacity is equivalent to more than 770  million pounds. Dow expects that its combination of scale and  sustainability will allow it to command a premium over standard  plastics, which might put the squeeze on smaller bioplastic producers.
 
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