A Surprising New Afterlife for Gum
Originally published on
British designer Anna Bullus is on a mission to recycle chewing gum into useful objects, cleaning up our streets in the process.
More than £14bn is spent on chewing gum around the world each year, but a lot of that gum will end up stuck to the ground. Gum is the second most common type of street litter after cigarette materials. In the UK, councils spend around £50m each year cleaning up the mess. But Anna had an idea. What if the sticky stuff could actually be recycled and turned into useful objects? Around 10 years ago, she began a project looking at kerbside litter. She examined random samples, looking at things like crisp packets and cigarette butts. She then tried to figure out which elements could be recycled. “One of the litters I found was a piece of chewing gum and as a designer I was completely amazed there was nothing actually being done to recycle it,” she said. Researching the chemistry of chewing gum, she discovered that its main ingredient, the gum base, is commonly a synthetic rubber, a type of polymer similar to plastic. “It’s called polyisobutylene,” explains Anna, “the same stuff you find in the inner tube of bicycle wheels.” It is obtained from petrochemicals, which are refined from fossil fuels like crude oil. She realized that chewing gum, even once it has been finished with, is a versatile and potentially useful material.Collecting Gum
But how do you persuade people to donate their gum – instead of carelessly tossing it on to the street?
Moulding Gum
Another challenge for Anna was to find industrial partners willing to recycle old gum – something completely novel. She eventually persuaded a recycling plant in Worcester to get on board. It takes her bins and filters out unwanted material, like paper or sweet wrappers, before grinding it into pieces and then compounds this with other recycled plastic polymers. The proportion in the mixture varies, but Anna says each object she makes contains a minimum of 20% chewing gum. At a plastic moulding specialist in Leicester called Amber Valley, which normally makes alarm casings, Anna creates her designer objects. Here, the mixture containing the old chewing gum is put into an injection moulding machine. It is heated and then ejected as a paste, which can be moulded into new objects as it cools. “There’s no difference [from] the equivalent polypropylene material that it’s based against, the processing temperatures and parameters are all identical,” says Brett Nixon, a manager at the plant. “When you are handling the finished product, you do take a while to adjust to the fact that this has been in somebody’s mouth previously. ‘But once you get over that fear it’s easy. By recycling it and giving it another lease of life it’s helping the environment, it’s an absolutely fantastic idea.”
Industry Response
The UK Parliament has considered imposing taxes on chewing gum companies if they do not do more to combat gum litter. Anna’s project has been given financial support from Wrigley, one of the largest manufacturers. It also provides her with surplus material from its Plymouth factory to add to her supply. Alex Hunter-Dunn, a spokesman for Wrigley, explained why the company backs the project. “Gumdrop is a really creative and innovative way to get people responsibly disposing of their gum and binning it. We fundamentally believe that behaviour change is the only long-term sustainable solution to tackle the issue and we are very much behind that.”