Paper Mate Biodegradable Mechanical Pencil Biodegradability Test
(Phew, that's a mouthfull)Long term readers should recall that for the past year I have been putting the Paper Mate Biodegradable mechanical pencil to the test. Well 1 year is up so the test is over. Let’s just refresh our memories. The main body of the Paper Mate Biodegradable mechanical pencil is made from a special plastic which is claimed to be biodegradable. The Paper Mate website states
“Paper Mate® Biodegradable* products have been tested according to internationally recognized standards ISO 17556 and ISO 20200. Tests confirmed that, under normal temperature conditions found in soil/home compost, the product’s biodegradable components biograde(sic) in about a year.”Not one to miss an opportunity for scientific investigation, I decided to put this to the test myself, and a year ago buried a Paper Mate Biodegradable mechanical pencil in my garden. You can read the previous postings on all this via these links:
- Paper Mate Biodegradable Mechanical Pencil Review
- Paper Mate Biodegradable Mechanical Pencil biodegradability test – The start
- Paper Mate Biodegradable Mechanical Pencil biodegradability test – 6 months
Push aside the mint and parsley to find the Paper Mate stuck in the soil as a grave marker.
Now dig down a bit to find the body.
Here’s the body and the marker, fresh from exhumation.
Now let’s give them a good scrubbing in some lukewarm water with detergent to remove as much dirt and grime as possible.
Those barcode labels still look pretty good! |
It is interesting to note that the grave-marker pencil has only been attacked from the soil-line down. It is basically as good as new above ground level despite being outdoors for a year. Equally interesting is that the barcode label has protected the surface of the buried pencil. The body surface directly beneath the barcode label has not started to degrade like the rest of the body.
At the start of this little experiment the two test pencils weighed in at 16 grams. After 1 year they now weigh in at…14 grams. So they have lost 2 grams of material in a year. Most of that would be the two tips which have gone missing. I can only assume those much smaller sections with much greater surface to volume ratios have been eaten away quicker? Either that or grave-robbers.
Whilst there’s no question these pencils are starting to biodegrade, I really must question the statement that these pencils will biodegrade “…in about a year”. Personally I think my garden counts as “normal temperature conditions found in soil/home compost”.
Thanks for the fascinating update! What I find most interesting about your experiment is that these pencils are clearly biodegradable (apparently over a somewhat longer term than advertised), yet they seem quite resistant to breaking down in the open air. So one can use of of these knowing it wont start to fall apart (and assuming the mechanism holds up) until it's tossed into landfill. They seem to have the balance right. That's kinda cool.
ReplyDeleteThe pen's performance is meh. Good to know that it will probably eventually break down. But, that herb garden is the real standout!
ReplyDeleteInteresting update. Are you going to stick them back in the ground for another year ?
ReplyDeleteInterestingly the quoted
"ISO 17556 and ISO 20200. Tests confirmed that, under normal temperature conditions found in soil/home compost," indicates that they may have been put into garden compost rather than plain soil which would accelerate the degredation of the plastic.
The labels seem to last surprisingly well; perhaps they should have been made of more easily biodegradable material.
Nice garden too.
Thanks for the compliments about the garden. It's looking quite good for the start of winter.
ReplyDeleteThe test is over. I haven't re-buried the pencils.
Why not make a good pencil, that people wouldn't throw away? wouldn't that be better for the environment and it will give something vintage for the later years
ReplyDeletePretty cool update. Yet this biodegradable pencil seems just like another gimmick in the string of pseudo-beneficial "green" products that keep getting released.
ReplyDeleteEthereal Winter Wind - that is a very valid point. I guess though the fact remains that a huge percentage of pens and pencils are lost, broken, etc and so biodegradability (perhaps even recyclability, although thats probably stretching it) would seem to have a place in product life cycle.
ReplyDeleteAlso from me a thank you for the up-date. Razide's point about compost sounds interesting, but your results are really disappoint. The biodegradability sounds like another advertising/marketing lie :(
ReplyDeleteNews flash these pencils won't save the world =(
ReplyDeleteWhy not bury them now in good "living" compost until next year?
ReplyDeleteOk, the degradability sounds like horror for a pencil collector, but the idea has some charme in spite of the missed time frame... I guess it also works in water: http://www.wissenschaft.de/sixcms/media.php/1434/m_ll.jpg or http://www.allmystery.de/dateien/pr55413,1248562189,3426913845_1c2038898d.jpg
ReplyDeletekiwi-d, congratulations for your blog on mechanical pencils.
ReplyDeleteI sent you an email to with two photographs of a mechanical pencil (made in japan by Staedtler) that I bought 10 years ago, but that is no longer for sale.
You know him? you have any information?
thanks,
Marco Ricci
Thanks for the experiment, and thanks for posting. Sounds like ISO has some testing methodology problems...
ReplyDelete