Once upon a time, food  was used for one thing: eating. Today, it has a much more complicated  role; scientists, manufacturers and policy makers are exploring whether  food could one day eliminate our dependence on oil. Food-based fuels  like ethanol and biodiesel are increasingly replacing gasoline and  diesel in our fuel tanks. Now, some think food can do the same thing to  the plastics industry, helping to replace more than 900,000 barrels of  oil and natural gas used to manufacture plastic in the United States  daily [source: U.S. EIA].
     Food-based plastics, made out of everything from  corn to sugarcane, have rapidly grown in popularity over the past  several years. Packaging materials, gift cards, cell phone  casings -- all can be made from these eco-friendly materials. As the  quality of food-based plastics improves, they will have broader and  broader applications.
Proponents cite two main advantages of food-based plastics over  their petroleum-based counterparts. First, they're made from a renewable  resource. As long as farmers grow the crops these plastics are made out  of, production can continue indefinitely. Second, food-based plastics  are widely considered to be easier on the environment. For instance,  they require much less energy to produce than traditional plastics and  release fewer greenhouse gases in the process. Better yet, they break  down into harmless organic compounds -- in the right conditions.
Now for the drawbacks. One of the most glaring is their relatively low melting point. While popular plastics like polyethylene terephthalate (PET)  may have melting points well beyond 400 degrees Fahrenheit (204 degrees  Celsius), some plant-based plastics turn into puddles just from being  left in a car on a sunny day [source: Machinist Materials]. For instance, polylactic acid (PLA),  a corn-based plastic used by retail giant Wal-Mart among other  companies, can have a melting point of just 114 degrees Fahrenheit (46  degrees Celsius) [source: Royte]. As a result, food-based plastics are simply unsuitable for a wide range of applications.
What's more, food-based plastics may not be as environmentally  friendly as they appear. While they are biodegradable, most only break  down under very specific conditions found in industrial composting  plants. That means you can't simply throw them on the compost pile in  your backyard and expect them to turn into soil, and if they do end up  in a landfill,  they break down just as slowly as conventional plastics.
 While  food-based plastics can be recycled, they can't simply be mixed in with  other recyclable plastics. In fact, the recycling industry considers  food-based plastics a "contaminant" that takes time and money to  process.
     A final argument against food-based plastics is that generating  them requires land and resources that could be going to producing actual  food. Already, the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) estimates  that, by 2014, nearly a quarter of all grain production will go toward  making ethanol and other biofuels; if food-based plastics take off, that  number could climb even higher [source: Baker and Zahniser].  Environmentalists also worry about the harmful effects of the  pesticides and genetically modified crop strains used to create some of  these plastics.
But don't give up on food-based plastics yet. While they still  represent less than 1 percent of the plastics market, some very large  companies have committed to both improving and using the plastics moving  forward [source: Environmental Leader]. 
For instance, electronics manufacturers Panasonic and NEC have both  announced the development of food-based plastics with significantly  improved durability, heat resistance and ease of production compared to  products currently on the market. Metabolix, another bioplastics  manufacturer, has developed a plastic called Mirel that biodegrades in  normal compost piles. 
Production costs for food-based plastics are  rapidly dropping as well, which, coupled with their widening range of  applications, will make them a much stronger alternative to conventional  plastics moving forward. Perhaps the strongest argument for food-based  plastics, however, is that after we've finally exhausted our supply of  oil, they'll still be waiting for us.
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 by "environment clean generations"

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