...Good for Families, Safe for the Environment
wherever you live, wherever you work, chemicals
are a vital part of your life. They are a key component
in the products you use to clean your skin, in the
building materials you use for the construction of
your home and in the packaging products you use for
your food.
For example, did you know the shampoo we use to make
our hair feel so clean contains hydroxypropyl methylcellulose
- and the "natural" barley and wheat cereal
that makes us feel so healthy is made with thiamin
mononitrate? With these wordy terms in mind, it is
not hard to understand why people get confused when
polystyrene manufacturers attempt to explain the nature
of their products.
This fact sheet, published by the Plastics Food Service
Packaging Group and its members, presents the facts
about polystyrene. This information should help you
gain a deeper understanding of why polystyrene is
the best choice for food service packaging.
What is inside?
Styrene, a petroleum by-product, is the primary raw
material from which polystyrene is made. Styrene,
first commercially produced in the 1930s, played an
important role during World War II in the production
of synthetic rubber. After the war, much of the use
of styrene shifted to the manufacture of commercial
polystyrene products. Synthetic styrene is also used
in the manufacture of products such as automobile
parts, electronic components, boats, recreational
vehicles, and synthetic rubbers. Today, you or a member
of your family will probably use a product derived
from styrene.
Modern man has known about styrene for centuries.
A naturally occurring substance, styrene is present
in many foods and beverages, including wheat, beef,
strawberries, peanuts and coffee beans. Also found
in the spice cinnamon, its chemical structure is similar
to cinnamic aldehyde, the chemical component that
elicits cinnamon's flavour. It is naturally present
to flavour foods, and is used as a flavouring additive
to such food as baked goods, frozen dairy products,
soft candy, and gelatins and puddings, with permission
from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA).
The Plastics Food Service Packaging Group works closely
with the Styrene Information and Research Centre (SIRC),
whose mission is to collect, develop, analyze and
communicate pertinent information on styrene. Since
1987, SIRC has undertaken a comprehensive research
program to enhance understanding of styrene's potential
to affect human health and the environment.
Polystyrene meets stringent U.S. FDA standards for
use in food contact packaging and is safe for consumers.
Health organizations encourage the use of single-use
food service products, including polystyrene, because
they provide increased food safety.(2)
All packaging (glass, aluminium, paper, and plastic
- including polystyrene) contains substances that
can "migrate," or transfer, to foods or
beverages. The FDA regulates residual levels of these
components in food packaging to ensure that packaging
is safe to use.
What is not inside?
Polystyrene foam products are 95 percent air and only
five percent polystyrene. When polystyrene foam packaging
is produced, a blowing agent is used in the process.
Most polystyrene foam products never were made using
chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs) as a blowing agent. The
few polystyrene products that were made with CFCs
comprised a very small portion of the nation's CFC
use. According to the U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA), only two to three percent of CFCs used
in the United States in the 1980s went toward production
of polystyrene packaging products. At the forefront
of U.S. industry, polystyrene manufacturers exceeded
government goals and timetables during the phase-out
period of CFCs in the late 1980s.
Polystyrene foam products are now manufactured primarily
using two types of blowing agents: Pentane and Carbon
Dioxide.
Pentane gas has no effect on the upper ozone layer,
although, if not recovered, it can contribute to low-level
smog formation. Therefore, manufacturers use state-of-the-art
technology to capture pentane emissions.
With ever-evolving technology, some manufacturers
use carbon dioxide (CO2 or other hydrocarbons in some
cases) as an expansion agent for polystyrene foam.
CO2 is non-toxic, non-flammable, does not contribute
to low-level smog, and has no stratospheric ozone
depletion potential. In addition, the carbon dioxide
used for this technology is recovered from existing
commercial and natural sources. As a result, the use
of this blowing agent technology does not increase
the levels of CO2 in the atmosphere.