Researchers at Michigan State University say they’ve developed a new biodegradable plastic alternative that’s easier to compost.

The team created a bio-based polymer blend that’s compostable in both home and industrial settings, the university’s School of Packaging announced last week after their work was published in the peer-reviewed ACS Publications journal.

Biodegradable plastics can cut down on waste from single-use plastics like straws and water bottles, said team lead Rafael Auras, who hopes the research can make a dent in the global effort to reduce plastic waste.

“We can reduce the amount that goes into a landfill,” Auras said.

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The team worked with polylactic acid, or PLA, which has been used in packaging for over a decade. Instead of petroleum (like typical plastic), it uses plant sugars and breaks down into water, carbon dioxide and lactic acid.

But PLA can only break down in the heat of industrial composters, not home composters. Even in industrial composters, PLA doesn’t always break down quickly or completely.

It can take as much as 20 days before PLA starts to be digested by microbes in an industrial compost setting, researchers said.

To accelerate this process, the team incorporated what’s called a “thermoplastic starch” into PLA. This carbon-based starch helps the microbes in compost more easily break down the bioplastic.