Types of Plastic (Cambridge (CIE) IGCSE Environmental Management): Revision Note
Exam code: 0680
Types of plastic
Plastics are long-lasting synthetic materials used in packaging, industry and everyday products
Their environmental impact depends on:
What they are made from
How they break down
Different types of plastics behave differently in soil, water and other ecosystems
Conventional plastics
Conventional plastics—plastics made from fossil fuels, such as crude oil or natural gas
These plastics are generally non-biodegradable
They do not decompose naturally within a short time
They break into smaller fragments rather than fully decomposing
They can take hundreds to thousands of years to break down into smaller fragments
Bioplastics
Bioplastics—plastics made fully or partly from biological raw materials
Sources include plant starch, vegetable oils or algae
Bioplastics can be biodegradable or non-biodegradable, depending on their chemical structure
Not all plant-based plastics decompose naturally
They are designed to reduce reliance on fossil fuels
Their environmental benefit also depends on how they are disposed of
Biodegradable plastics
Biodegradable plastics—plastics designed to decompose in water or soil
Breakdown occurs through natural processes
They can be decomposed by bacteria and fungi
Microorganisms help break chemical bonds in the plastic
Decomposition rate varies with biotic factors microbial activity
High microbial activity increases breakdown
Decomposition also depends on abiotic factors such as temperature, moisture and oxygen levels
Warmer, wetter conditions encourage microbial activity and therefore speed up biodegradation
Non-biodegradable plastics
Non-biodegradable plastics—plastics that do not decompose quickly
Break down over very long periods (hundreds to thousands of years) through physical processes like sunlight degradation or wave action
These plastics often accumulate in landfills, oceans and coastal environments
They contribute heavily to long-term plastic pollution
Microplastics
Microplastics—plastic fragments less than 5 mm in length
Can be invisible to the naked eye
Formed when larger plastics break down over time
These fragments spread easily through water and soil
They are also manufactured for use in commercial products
Examples include microbeads in cosmetics or cleaning products
Examiner Tips and Tricks
Students often assume all bioplastics are biodegradable. You need to know that some bioplastics do not decompose naturally.
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