Contact Information: For more information, please contact: Jill McCubbin Conversation Architect market2world communications inc. Office: (613) 256-3939 Email: or Dave Inglis CEO BI-AX International Inc. Office: 519-357-1818 Email:
Brand Alert: Compostable Biodegradable Plastics Are a Reality
Corn-Based Evlon Film From BI-AX Enables NviroWare to Offer Tableware Products Consumers Are Willing to Pay More for to Protect the Planet
| Source: BI-AX Inc.
WINGHAM, ON--(Marketwire - June 24, 2009) - David Inglis, CEO of Wingham, ON-based BI-AX
International Inc., sensed a green packaging opportunity in the late 90s
after he learned about the Eastern Garbage Patch -- a swirling vortex in
the Pacific Ocean of mostly plastic trash that has since grown to twice the
size of the continental United States.
"I fully understood the strain on the earth due to petroleum-based
plastics," said Inglis. "So I devoted my company to becoming part of the
solution with an R&D program resulting in a completely compostable,
biodegradable film called Evlon." Evlon is available in a wide range of
thicknesses that can be used in all manner of consumer packaging.
Environmentally aware consumers are demanding an earth-friendly approach
motivated by knowledge that plastic litter is leaching known carcinogens
and hormone disruptors into the earth's soil and water. Government
legislation isn't far behind, with municipalities across North America
demanding that retail stores and corporations pick up more of the tab for
recycling mountains of plastic and other waste.
Evlon is certified by the Biodegradable Products Institute (BPI) as a
packaging material that can disintegrate and biodegrade quickly and safely
when composted in a professionally managed facility. When composted all
that remains is water and carbon dioxide.
The inspiration for Evlon came from the rolling fields surrounding BI-AX's
two manufacturing plants, totaling 265,000 sq. ft., in the southwestern
Ontario farm communities of Wingham and Tiverton. Evlon's key ingredient is
corn, a renewable field crop that provides starch, converted to sugar, then
fermented to form lactic acid. The lactic acid is converted into a lactide
molecule using heat, then the lactic acid molecules are polymerized to form
PLA, or Ingeo, provided to BI-AX by NatureWorks.
BI-AX employs a proprietary process to turn the PLA into manufactured film
-- the raw material for printable packaging including gift bags, health
food and produce wrappers, candy wrappers, snack food bags, DVD and CD
wraps, rigid cosmetics containers, labels, folding cartons and more.
Since Evlon's introduction in 2004, BI-AX has dealt with more than 100
consumer packaged goods companies, including Nviroplast, a LaPlace,
LA-based bio-plastic resin and finished good manufacturer of
environmentally friendly bio-plastic products with estimated 2009 revenues
of $2.5 million. One of those products is the NviroWare bio-plastic line of
tableware products that include forks and knives that are packaged in a
rigid, printed Evlon container.
Nviroplast is currently on track to produce $2 million-a-year with
NviroWare products, and promises to be a $10 million-a-year business based
on interest from large U.S. retail chains. NviroWare products include:
plates, bowls, cups and cutlery kits. The suggested list price ranges from
$3.29 for a package of 15 count plates to $3.39 for a package of 48 pieces
of cutlery compared to "oil-based" competitors that retail for about $2.39
for plates and $2.59 for cutlery kits.
"We are experiencing tremendous success with 'NviroWare,'" says Nviroplast
Founder/COO Blaine DuBose. "And we've heard that our retailers in some
cases are marking up NviroWare products that represent about a 50% premium
over traditional plastics. This matches our own research that says 80% of
consumers will pay 99 cents more for the demonstrably greener version of
consumer staple products. Consumers want to do the right thing," he adds,
"and that's what is being reflected in our retail customers' environmental
mandates."
"In our case Evlon is an absolute requirement," says DuBose. "Yes, it costs
more than plastic, but our customers are thrilled that our bio-plastic
cutlery sets are biodegradable and compostable right down to the packages
we put them in. The bottom line's right at the cash register, and consumers
are speaking with their wallets."