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Sep 2015

I understand that you have spent time and money in research to achieve this product that can , in a certain way benefit the environment, but you have to understand the market laws. If the price is high, few people buy. If the price is low a lot of people will buy and the cost of production and research can be rapidly pay. Is your bet. When you say that the makers community should try to make the “next industrial revolution a sustainable one”, it’s a nonsense because it already is. PLA is a bioplastic, and this type of material is expected to make major contributions to environmental protection. Also, PLA can be shredded and extruded again, using the several home filament extruders like filabot,filastruder, EWE, etc. So, the recycling process can be done by almost every maker, with its own printing waste. The second point is the health security in using your filament. Do you have certificates that prove that it is not dangerous to bread the fumes produced by the printing process?

@Nancy you are aware that the people from your video are the same people from the @?

I think the great thing here is that with Refill they take it a step further. It is not just PLA, it is a step towards any kind of plastic.

Yes i am. I have never been against them or their project. But i still think that price is high.

ok, price is a bit steep indeed, but he explained well why this is so I can understand.

I see it as a good starting point. Now it is expensive in a couple of years it might be the regular thing to do and it is cheap :smiley:

17 days later

Just to address your point about the spools themselves being made out of ABS, we’ve come out with a spool that is made from PLA and agricultural waste products, namely flax shive. We call it the Eco-Spool. I think the big deal is that bio-plastics are renewable and will eventually degrade, versus petroleum-based plastics.