Green Packaging: These Brazilian Cassava Bags Decompose in a Mere 60 Days

Cassava package by CBPAKBrazil’s CBPAK, with 15 employees, produces 300,000 packages for food each month. But they are not those common polystyrene packages. The CBPAK packages are made out of cassava starch. Ecologically correct, they take just 60 days to decompose and do not pollute the environment.

The idea of packages made out of starch arose in 2001, when engineer Claudio Rocha Bastos heard from a friend that a group was researching the possibility of using cassava as raw material. “I saw that that could become technology,” explained Bastos who, in 2006, concluded the process for development of the packages.

Located in São Carlos, in the interior of São Paulo, CBPAK received its first raw material from large starch producers and now has around 40 clients, especially in the sectors of organic agriculture and events. The company has also closed a deal to supply cups and trays to aerial catering company Lufthansa Service Group, starting in 2010.

Bastos says that the company is currently undergoing a phase of capitalization, and that after this period it should start investing in the foreign market through joint ventures. According to the businessman, the European market has already shown interest in the product.

Also in July this year, the company should receive a new machine to expand production to 3 million items a month. Bastos believes that will be the right moment to start exporting. The company has already sent products for testing in Chile, Uruguay and Argentina.

With the growing production, Bastos still hopes to expand the number of employees at his company to 80, working in three shifts. The forecasted revenues for 2011 are also good, reaching 10 million Brazilian reais (US$ 5.7 million).

The government of Brazil has part of the business. In 2007, CBPAK signed a contract with the Brazilian Development Bank (BNDES) to help in the consolidation of technology. Today, the BNDESPar, the bank’s investment arm, has 35% of the company’s capital.

Despite the high cost of cassava packages, the ecological appeal is strong and has already called the attention of companies that transform food, as well as the sugar and alcohol and electronic product sectors, as the organization is developing starch products that may replace the polystyrene protectors that come in cardboard boxes.

Service

CBPAK Tecnologia
Telephone: (+55 16) 3368-5935
Site: www.cbpak.com.br
E-mail: cbpak@cbpak.com.br

Anba

Tags:

You May Also Like

Falklands War Hero Believed Killed in Combat Jailed in Brazil for Robbery

He was given for dead and honored in multiple ceremonies as one of the ...

Vargas: Haunting Brazil, 50 Years Later

Brazilian President Lula and his Workers Party may well owe their beginnings to Getúlio ...

In Brazil, Indians Can Do It All: Smuggle, Rape and Kill

A good 12 years ago, still in the pre-Internet era, when we had arguments ...

Lula Throws Hat in Brazilian Reelection Ring With 3 to 1 Poll Advantage

Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva announced Saturday in Brazil’s capital BrasÀ­lia his ...

Brazilian Task Force Ends Malaria in Peru and Colombia Border

Known as the Vale do Javari Task Force, and coordinated by Brazil’s National Health ...

Brazilian Real Hits 35-Month High Against Dollar

Brazilian and Latin American equities turned lower on the day, after a substantial ascent ...

Brazil Finds Light Oil Offshore. 150 Million Barrels This Time

Petrobras, the Brazilian state-controlled oil multinational announced this Monday, July 14, that it had ...

Brazilians, the World’s Friendliest People. Or Are They?

It’s widely known that Brazilians are the largest community in Orkut, Google’s invitation-only social ...

Extensive Ore Beds Go Unexplored in Brazil

The state of Amazonas possesses Brazil’s largest known reserves of sylvite, kaolin, and niobium, ...

Brazil’s Beef Exports Grow 78% in 2004

Brazilian bovine meat exports have produced a revenue of US$ 1.555 billion between January ...