Today’s Solutions: May 07, 2026

As the quest to find a viable planet-friendly alternative to plastic continues, a bioplastic made of organic fish waste has landed its UK designer a prestigious international award and a £30,000 prize.

Lucy Hughes, a graduate in product design from the University of Sussex, scooped the James Dyson award for her biodegradable and compostable material known as MarinaTex. The bioplastic is strong, translucent and flexible, making it a possible alternative for single-use packagings such as bags and sandwich wrappers. Unlike current materials used for these purposes, it breaks down in home food-waste or compost bins, and its key ingredients are fish scales and skin — waste products that MarinaTex saves from ending up in the landfill.

The annual award scheme aims to challenge young people to “design something that solves a problem” and is open to students and recent graduates in product design, industrial design, and engineering. Hughes sought to tackle the problems of environmentally harmful single-use plastics and inefficient waste streams by harnessing fish offcuts to create the eco-friendly plastic alternative. 

This story was one of the best from 2019, and we are happy to include it in our “12 Days of Optimism” as we welcome in the new year!

Solutions News Source Print this article
More of Today's Solutions

How Paraguay cut its poverty rate from over 50 to 16 percent in two decades

BY THE OPTIMIST DAILY EDITORIAL TEAM In 2005, more than half of Paraguay’s population lived in poverty. By 2025, that share had fallen to ...

Read More

Pro parenting tips to spark your children’s life-long love for the grea...

BY THE OPTIMIST DAILY EDITORIAL TEAM In today's digital world, the pull of screens can be difficult to overcome, particularly for kids. However, the ...

Read More

Rainforest nations join forces to protect biodiversity

Late last month, major rainforest nations gathered in Brazzaville, Republic of Congo, to address the rising problem of deforestation and safeguard the invaluable biodiversity ...

Read More

Investigating when our bodies change the fastest and why it matters

BY THE OPTIMIST DAILY EDITORIAL TEAM Aging might seem like a slow, steady march, but science suggests otherwise. If you’ve ever looked in the ...

Read More