User talk:SophieStrombackWelcome
Hello, SophieStromback, and Welcome to Wikipedia!
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Polymateria Ltd is a British privately-owned technology company which develops biodegradable and compostable solutions to tackle plastic pollution. Its proprietary formulation called Biotransformation is time-controlled to break down commonly-littered forms of plastic such as polyethylene and polypropylene should they escape from recycling streams, without creating microplastics. In 2020, Polymateria became the first company in the world to fully biodegrade the most commonly littered forms of plastic packaging in less than a year in real-world conditions without creating microplastics. History Polymateria was founded in 2015 by Jonathan Sieff and Lee Davy-Martin in joint development with Imperial College London and is based at the I-HUB in White City Campus. Niall Dunne, former Chief Sustainability Officer of BT Group, is CEO of the company. In October 2019, Polymateria announced a partnership with specialty chemical company Clariant (now Avient) to bring its Biotransformation technology to market in South East Asia. A subsequent partnership agreement with Clariant announced in January 2020 includes a deal with the Indian Government to bring Biotransformation to India. In July 2020, Polymateria announced a funding round of £15 million by Planet First Partners (PFP), a long-term impact investment platform led by former Verlinvest founder and CEO Frédéric de Mévius of the De Mévius family behind Anheuser-Busch InBev. The announcement also included expansion of Polymateria’s board to include Frédéric de Mévius and Simon Susman, former CEO and Chairman of Woolworths Holdings and Chairman of Virgin Active Holdings. Former Marks & Spencer CEO Marc Bolland joined as Chairman. In October 2020, Polymateria sponsored the first standard to measure the biodegradability of polyolefins. The standard, PAS 9017, was developed by a steering group of experts in the field of plastics including Waste and Resource Action Programme (WRAP); Food and Environment Research Agency (Fera); Polymateria; Anglia Ruskin University; Imperial College London; Avient (previously Clariant); Impact Solutions; Department for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy (BEIS). It was subject to a public consultation process, where other interested parties submitted comments. It published with consensus of the steering group. Biotransformation Polymateria’s Biotransformation technology is a bespoke approach to redesigning plastic packaging at point of manufacture. It works with pure materials capable of full and safe return to nature without damaging the waste hierarchy of reduce, reuse and recycle. The technology can be time-controlled to Biotransform the hard crystalline and amorphous structure into a wax-like material through multiple chemical reactions achieving carbon-carbon bond scission, ensuring no microplastics. Its proprietary use of ‘synthetic’ prebiotic attracts microbes, funghi and bacteria to fully consume the wax-like material in real-world mesophilic conditions, producing biomass and leaving behind no ecotoxicity issues or microplastics. In July 2020, Polymateria announced that on a range of the most-littered forms of packaging – polyethylene and polypropylene – independent third-party laboratory testing achieved 100% biodegradation on a rigid plastic container in 336 days and film material in 226 days. This was done in real-world mesophilic conditions. The process needed no industrial composting facilities and left no microplastics behind, nor did it cause any environmental harm in the process. Biotransformation is fully compatible with the circular economy and the three-Rs (Reduce, Reuse, Recycle) and incorporates a fourth R of Redesign. The technology is proven at independent labs to be fully recyclable per Association of Plastic Recyclers (APR) and Plastic Recyclers Europe (PRE) guidelines and has been proven at independent labs to have no impact on recycling streams at scale. Biotransformation works with a wide range of plastic types including: • Injection moulded or thermoformed PP: as found in clear plastic containers from a supermarket delicatessen. • Injection moulded PP or LDPE: the lids of plastic bottles, such as for soft drinks or cleaning products, are often made of this material. • Mono and multi-layer PP, LLDPE, LDPE: thin plastic bags, the nets in which fruit is packaged and ready-meal wrappings are often made of this. • Mono and multi-layer BOPP: candy wrappers, cigarette film, bakery products and flower sleeves. • Non-woven PP: facemasks, tea bags and wipes. See also • Circular economy • Biodegradation • Microplastics Side panel
Founded 2015 Headquarters I-HUB, Imperial College London, London, United Kingdom Area served Worldwide Key people Niall Dunne (CEO) Dr Christopher Wallis (VP, Innovations) Marc Bolland (Chairman) Frédéric de Mévius (Board) Simon Susman (Board) Jonathan Sieff (Founder) Lee Davy-Martin (Founder) Products Biotransformation formulation; Masterbatch Number of employees 30 (2020) Website https://www.polymateria.com/ SophieStromback (talk) 15:23, 11 December 2020 (UTC) Welcome to Wikipedia, but be careful what you wish forGreetings SophieStromback, so I've implemented that edit you requested. However, I'll likely be making some further changes to bring the wording more in line with WP:NPOV. I don't think the article is bad, but I kinda "adopt" most articles I have contributed to, and try to keep them as good or better. As for your request above - I'm inclined to accept it as well, because when reading up I found enough sources that would qualify Polymateria for notability. I've done my own search in addition to the ones on your company's home page news room, and found a few more or better ones (The Daily Mail for example is not accepted here, but the Prince of Wales has it on his own web page, too). Side note: This link from your newsroom resolves to nothing, but was saved by the Wayback machine here so I could use it. Still, it's probably not in your company's interest to have such a dead link on your web page. Problem: I am not the most experienced author, so if you already found someone else to write the article, I wouldn't mind stepping back. However, in case I am the sole volunteer for now, I would very much prefer to write the article myself from the ground up. I would gladly use your suggestion as a structure, but I'd personally feel weird if I just copied it. And be aware that writing articles might take a while with me, I'm not the quickest person ^^ And as an addition to the last paragraph: Be careful what you wish for! If I create that article (and probably regardless of who creates it), I will make sure to also include criticism on it with due weight. Luckily, atm you folks don't seem to get much bad press; but if you did, it would land here too. I assume since you declared your COI and all you are serious and well aware of that, but I just wanted to reiterate that. --LordPeterII (talk) 20:27, 13 December 2020 (UTC)
P.s. Thanks for spotting the deadlink as well :) SophieStromback (talk) 09:34, 15 December 2020 (UTC) Hi again LordPeterII, another thought I had, would it please be possible to read your drafted version for the Polymateria page before you publish it? SophieStromback (talk) 15:28, 15 December 2020 (UTC)
Fabulous, thanks again LordPeterII and as said if you need anything from me please do let me know! SophieStromback (talk) 16:40, 16 December 2020 (UTC)
Hi LordPeterII, I have references here for Niall Dunne's page: the Collectively point [1] and the running [2] And as for the Polymateria page and the "Polymateria was founded in 2015 by Jonathan Sieff and Lee Davy-Martin" this reference should cover it: [3] Let me know if any you need help finding any other references :)
Hi LordPeterII, Hope you've had a good festive period! I was just looking through the draft page and wanted to highlight that Polymateria do not offer compostable solutions but solely biodegradable solutions. :) Hope you have a lovely start to the new year, here's hoping for a more optimistic 2021! Speak in the new year :) All the best, SophieStromback (talk) 11:01, 31 December 2020 (UTC)
Hi LordPeterII, Sorry about my delayed response, could you please hold off publishing it while I review? I appreciate the time you've taken to put it together. There are a few adjustments I suggest before it is published: - can we add more information on the tech and the applications it can be used for as in the text I submitted? - the text regarding critisms is unproportionably large with a lot of unsubstantiated claims and could we change the subtitle to something other than critisms e.g. Media coverage? Let me also see if I can get an image and get back to you before anything is published. Best, Sophie
Hi LordPeterII, This has helped a lot, thanks for explaining it to me, beginning to get the grips of the process :) With regards to the technical side of things, I found this article : [1] It explains how the crystalline structure is broken down to produce a wax and lowers the molecular weight to much less than 5000 Da. Additionally, how it focuses on polyethylene and polypropylene. Could this article can be useful in adding some more details on how the technology works? Let me know if you want me to help structure the technical text or want any input from me. Although prominent, I also agree with you that the criticism section you’ve written is very well-balanced with arguments and counterarguments which I fully appreciate. There are only a few additions I would suggest if you agree:
Thirdly, I have this link here to a video PillowTalk with Robin Wright and Elizabeth Von Der Goltz talking about sustainable fashion where Robin Wright also highlights that her brand Pour Les Femmes will be working with Polymateria. Timestamp - 06:23. [6] This might be a useful source if we can add a mention on the Wikipage either about working with them or highlighting one of the applications it can be used for i.e. polybags. Finally, I have manged to get the logo up on WikiCommons – this is the link for using the logo: [File:Polymateria-logo.png|thumb|Polymateria logo] Give me a shout regarding your thoughts and as always let me know how I can be of assistance to you! Have a lovely weekend and speak again soon! Sophie
Hi LordPeterII, Thanks for considering the edits. With regards to the technical side of things I’ve explained some of the key points below (if anything is unclear or you have any questions let me know): Important to mention that the crystalline structure within the polymer is broken apart. This is one of the ways in which Polymateria’s technology is different to previous biodegradable claims which struggled to break apart the hard-crystalline regions in a polymer. Polymateria’s technology breaks apart the amorphous region as well as the crystalline region. Dalton is the universal unit measurement of molecular weight. Bacteria and fungi are able to break down and recycle the material back to nature if the material adheres to the criteria listed in the PAS 9017, one of them being it having a number average molecular weight (Mn) of 5000 Da or less. The technology is also time controlled so that the technology can be triggered within a certain timeframe which gives the product an appropriate service life and also gives the plastic a chance to be recycled. The technology acting as a safeguard if it ends up in the natural world either through littering or falling out of the waste/recycle management stream. I am checking to see if there are any images that would be good to use and I’ll get back to you on that. Thanks for the Wikipedia tips too! 😊 SophieStromback (talk) 12:35, 10 February 2021 (UTC)
Hi LordPeterII, Yes, looks good! Thanks for sorting the logo out (and I can confirm that Polymateria are all fine with it being used :) ) There is just one minor tweak I would ask for in the technical text, in the line "The company has developed a technology called Biotransformation, which involves adding certain chemicals to plastics during production to aid their decomposition" instead of chemicals could you write ...involves adding a bespoke masterbatch... as this is the term used for additives that alter the property of a plastic. The Wikipedia page for masterbatches is found here. As for the picture, I am just confirming that the photographer is ok with us using it on Wikipedia. Should be able to get back to you on that hopefully by the end of this week. All the best, SophieStromback (talk) 11:03, 18 February 2021 (UTC) Hi LordPeterII, I have confirmation on an image we can use however I am not so clued up on the copyright tags. This is an image that Polymateria own (and are happy to have on the Wikipedia page). Preferably it would not be used by others for other articles. Not sure which copyright tag or licence is the most appropriate and hoping that you could perhaps point me in the right direction? Thanks! SophieStromback (talk) 15:54, 25 February 2021 (UTC)
Hi LordPeterII, Not a worry at all! Hope all is well with you! Another reason we would prefer 'bespoke masterbatch' being used over 'chemicals' is because chemicals was the term used to describe what was added for the oxo-biodegradation process which produced microplastics. There is a bit of worry that someone reading it might dismiss our technology as oxo-biodegradation or associate it. As for the image, thank you for all the information on copyright - this is useful. I will revert back to you on it because I agree that it would be a nice to add an image. Additionally, I wanted to highlight some more publications Polymateria have been in over the past two weeks which would be great if we could weave into the Wikipedia article. There has been another video released highlighting Pour Les Femmes work with Polymateria but remember you saying that videos are not good for referencing. I have this article from Imperial which also mentions our work with Pour Les Femme . The Telegraph has also released an article highlighting in particular the technologies compatibility with recycling. Best, SophieStromback (talk) 11:25, 2 March 2021 (UTC)
Hi LordPeterII, Great, thanks - no rush because as you say the article will probably be under review for some time to come, fingers crossed it won't be too long till it is reviewed though :) I have also managed to get a picture from our labs and the visit from the Prince of Wales on the Wikipedia Commons: ![]() Let me know if you need anything else from me. Hope you have a good weekend and also again want to say a big thanks for the work you've put into this and the Wikipedia guidance you've provided me as a Wikipedia-beginner with, it is and has been much appreciated!
Hi LordPeterII, Yes, can confirm that we emailed the photographer Kevin and received his consent to add the picture to Wikipedia so that should be all good. Let me edit the caption now :) SophieStromback (talk) 16:47, 16 March 2021 (UTC)
I tried to update the caption but without much luck. How would I change the caption? I tried updating it to "The Prince of Wales visiting the Polymateria labs at the Imperial i-Hub and President of Innovation Dr Christopher Wallis (right) showing a cup made of the material." on Wikipedia commons but without any success... SophieStromback (talk) 16:56, 16 March 2021 (UTC) Hi LordPeterII, As always hope you are doing alright! We've had another exciting partnership revealed publicly which I wanted to share with you, that being our work together with the Extreme E races taking place this spring. Adding a link to it here. I was hoping a mention of this could be incorporated into the article as a new partnership? SophieStromback (talk) 11:51, 25 March 2021 (UTC)
Hi LordPeterII, Welcome back!! Long time no speak! Hope you are well! :D I will go ahead and ask Kevin to send that email template to Wikipedia now. Yes I agree, the reviewing stage has been lengthy so if you can pull any strings to speed up the reviewing the process that would be fantastic - thanks! SophieStromback (talk) 10:39, 5 May 2021 (UTC) Hi LordPeterII, Just dropping you a note to let you know that Kevin (the photographer) has sent that email template off to Wikipedia approving the use of the image. Have you had any luck speeding up the review process? SophieStromback (talk) 14:02, 24 May 2021 (UTC)
Hi LordPeterII, This is fantastic news - thank you so much for you help (and your very kind words, I repeat the sentiment towards you too :) )! Had a google of the page and it is very exciting to see the Wiki page appear under the Google search!! Yes, I will continue to check my Wikipedia account so do reach out whenever you need anything. There have also been some updates within and around Polymateria e.g. WRAP retracted their statements and some exciting work we did in Senegal with Extreme E. If you are ok with looking through some of the updates around Polymateria and happy to incorporate where and what you deem appropriate on the Wikipedia page I am happy to collate a list of some of the updates that might be worthy of being in the article so that things are up-to-date, I can share them on here with you once I've put the list together. Once again big thanks for pushing that review process!! SophieStromback (talk) 15:10, 28 June 2021 (UTC)
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