Is Mycelium Fungus the Plastic of the Future?

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  • čas přidán 1. 05. 2024
  • Is Fungus the Plastic of the Future? Use the code "Undecided" to get CuriosityStream for less than $15 a year! curiositystream.com/Undecided. Plastic changed the course of manufacturing forever, but came at a cost. Mycelium technology might be the solution and the next big boom ... a plastic-like replacement with so many uses and new opportunities for products, companies, and profits. Let's explore mycelium technology and how it can help us achieve a more renewable and cleaner future.
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  • Věda a technologie

Komentáře • 10K

  • @UndecidedMF
    @UndecidedMF  Před 2 lety +1135

    So what do think? Any uses I missed? Would you want to live in a mycelium insulated home? And thanks to Curiosity Stream ... use the code "Undecided" to get CuriosityStream for less than $15 a year! curiositystream.com/Undecided.
    Also, be sure to check out The Future of Solid State Wind Energy - No More Blades: czcams.com/video/nNp21zTeCDc/video.html

    • @RanjitDas-we1zx
      @RanjitDas-we1zx Před 2 lety +6

      I was thinking about you will upload your video today... And you just did this... 😊😊😊

    • @al-aurum2457
      @al-aurum2457 Před 2 lety +70

      the concern is its biodegradability...you dont want to buy shoes or houses that degraded after few weeks...it definitely works great as a single use product/packaging..though, it has potentials

    • @LeeMuayThai
      @LeeMuayThai Před 2 lety +25

      Mycelium should be more widespread! We should have stopped the use of plastic completely and switched over to something like mycelium. It is so much better for the environment and for our own health, it seems nothing but logical to use biodegradable alternatives to polymers. The societal lag causing old habits to die hard will most likely be humanity's downfall. The lack of federal drive to take initiative on issues such as this is what is holding humanity back.

    • @jesanvelazquez7792
      @jesanvelazquez7792 Před 2 lety +1

      OMG, that is a cheap cost for knowledge!

    • @TheZoepers
      @TheZoepers Před 2 lety

      would you use the mushrooms aka mycelia

  • @disgustedluigi
    @disgustedluigi Před 2 lety +17431

    Even if it ONLY replaces plastics in packaging that’ll be an enormous win.

    • @Ren089
      @Ren089 Před 2 lety +697

      Sad thing is corporate oil companies all over the world doesn't agree. Because their oil by products after fuel production is processed into non-biodegradable plastics. Which won a Nobel peace prize for making plastics possible from oil by products.

    • @TeenyTinyDevil
      @TeenyTinyDevil Před 2 lety +85

      @@Ren089 hmm so if they dont make plastics with it they just dump it?

    • @Ren089
      @Ren089 Před 2 lety +316

      @@TeenyTinyDevil they can put it back where they dig it or at least process them into a more suitainable products. Remember making it into plastics is just a temporary solutions of delaying the inevitable. All outcomes so far lead to more trash and unsustainable to the environment. Sadly people seems to ignore this cycle.

    • @clayz1
      @clayz1 Před 2 lety +88

      Amazon boxes, the filler material, and clear bubble product packaging. That would cut plastic use in half easily.

    • @disgustedluigi
      @disgustedluigi Před 2 lety +13

      @Park Justin yeah. Hence my comment.

  • @roccobierman4985
    @roccobierman4985 Před 2 lety +5048

    Is this another one of those miracle implements that is waved in our faces, EVERYONE says YES, and then we never see it again?

    • @BiscuitFever
      @BiscuitFever Před 2 lety +633

      Put your money where your mouth is. Insulate your house with it, get rid of plastics.

    • @PatrickKQ4HBD
      @PatrickKQ4HBD Před 2 lety +65

      Yes!

    • @davidtherwhanger6795
      @davidtherwhanger6795 Před 2 lety +698

      Well according to this there are already 4 companies doing it. So maybe it will keep going. And as I understand it you need oil to make plastic. And we are running out of oil. So this has the potential of filling at least part of the demand the end of oil will leave.

    • @charetjc
      @charetjc Před 2 lety +183

      @@BiscuitFever my house is insulated with fiberglass, paper, and wood...

    • @phillipanselmo8540
      @phillipanselmo8540 Před 2 lety +221

      considering they're patented, it probably won't be popular for 15-25 years

  • @youraverageyharnamite5389
    @youraverageyharnamite5389 Před rokem +224

    I remember proposing this concept to a friend of mine, they replied “Yeah but I don’t really want to eat off of dead mushrooms roots.” As if decomposed plant juice refined into plastic is better,

    • @spacezeppeli7358
      @spacezeppeli7358 Před rokem +55

      does the dude even know how bread is made

    • @calimorales9880
      @calimorales9880 Před rokem +4

      @@spacezeppeli7358 ahahahaha no

    • @error5202
      @error5202 Před rokem +2

      That poisons you with Microplastics

    • @RealLifeIronMan
      @RealLifeIronMan Před rokem +18

      Frustration with potential late adopters of a technology may be frustrating, but we must convince people with evidence not verbal jabs. It is unintelligent to disregard reason, but it is unwise to simply write those people off as fools.

    • @ritikguptark
      @ritikguptark Před rokem +1

      One thing like to mention here is...does the person who made plastic marketed it by saying hey..this is best to use not clothes...the positioning idea is very bad here..even though people started Caring about environments but its not 100% of world, we cant postitiotthese product in market daying this is good alternative to platic and its made of dead fungus ....no absolutely no, coat cutting is the key, if we go to business and deal directly with them no need for customer to know what its made and how, they just get it from market if other alternative is not presented

  • @keyholes
    @keyholes Před rokem +516

    I would love to see some big companies adopt this as internal packaging for electronics like TVs and white goods. The polystyrene used for those is the definition of single use - moulded to one product, just to get it to the consumer safely. I would love to be able to put that on my compost heap when I recycle the box it came in.

    • @talibong9518
      @talibong9518 Před rokem +12

      I think a better Idea would be making it a legal requirement that any goods like this for sale must be built to last, come with service manuals and be easily serviced and repaired, not be subject to any tax and even be subsidised to stop the manufacturing and sales of cheap low quality goods that have minimal warranties and break as soon as it expires.
      Using mycelium is just not currently feasable because the extra weight of mycelium compared to styrofoam would result in more fuel being used for transport, and the toxic fumes released into the environment from burning additional fuel is far worse than burying some styrofoam. When clean electric can be produced in excess and all vehicles run on electric then it will be worth it.

    • @blablabla7796
      @blablabla7796 Před rokem +12

      @@talibong9518 even if we make it built to last, technology is advancing at a pretty fast rate. TVs just a few years ago looked like clunky messes that displayed a magnitude lower of the pixels. Now they’re heading towards being smart. Imagine having a TV that’s still running the first version of android with hardware that doesn’t allow HDMI input. That’s what your TV is going to feel like in 10 years even if you can keep it in perfect condition. I think having something built to last will only work once we’ve plateaued with TV technology.

    • @slate613
      @slate613 Před rokem +8

      @@talibong9518 Corporations of the world will never make their products more durable/long lasting for one reason.
      PROFIT
      If we aren't replacing our phones every 18 months, or our cars every 3 to 5 years, their profits shrink and we all know it's a cardinal sin to interfere with the shareholders profits. . .Even if all they do is sit around in their mansions and make money doing nothing.

    • @cacogenicist
      @cacogenicist Před rokem

      Amazon pushing for that would be huge.
      Their huge fulfillment centers generate truly obscene metric shit-loads of plastic garbage, daily.

  • @cgbreeki849
    @cgbreeki849 Před 2 lety +740

    I would love to one day look at "trash" on the beach, see a mycelium package on the water and know that it won't take long before it's not there anymore.

    • @The1stHomosapien
      @The1stHomosapien Před 2 lety +17

      would you buy something in mycelium packaging over one witth plastic? even if it costs twice the price?

    • @cgbreeki849
      @cgbreeki849 Před 2 lety +70

      @@The1stHomosapien It really depends... but hopefully in the future the prices will change.

    • @peterfunny5662
      @peterfunny5662 Před 2 lety +110

      @@The1stHomosapien well, considering plastic packaging is really cheap, yes I would pay twice the amount.

    • @Fenris2
      @Fenris2 Před 2 lety +6

      Yeah enjoy the fungus spores in your intestines

    • @enlargedquack
      @enlargedquack Před 2 lety +88

      @@Fenris2 On that note, enjoy the plastic too since you love eating containers so much

  • @neonWHALE002
    @neonWHALE002 Před 2 lety +1193

    20 years from now, Pixar releases a movie about mushrooms having feelings

    • @santosdr2
      @santosdr2 Před 2 lety +48

      evolution would indicate that all of life is aware. That is how it forms adaptations to environment and stimuli, so it likely has feelings perhaps not as complex as ours but things alive happen to live. odd concept, so being more intune with life is a good thing. This product is good but understanding that we take life in order to live ours will help us reduce that amount of life shed.
      Being connected with all things in life and not disconnected from our roles as Humans. We are care takers of this world. But we aren't caring for it real well. Or ourselves.

    • @SolutionsNotPrayers
      @SolutionsNotPrayers Před 2 lety +8

      Super Mario World!!!

    • @YHWH-SHUA
      @YHWH-SHUA Před 2 lety +30

      @@santosdr2 that’s not how evolution works lmao

    • @santosdr2
      @santosdr2 Před 2 lety +1

      @@YHWH-SHUA Okay. Feel free to explain it.

    • @gabgarcia9935
      @gabgarcia9935 Před 2 lety +12

      I wouldn't be surprised if they did have feelings, they are animal like, and all that mycelial network might be like a brain.

  • @IloveJellow
    @IloveJellow Před rokem +65

    I also just saw somewhere that many mushrooms can in fact digest plastics and still be edible.. But maybe we could use both mixed in with the wood chips to help start breaking down the over flowing plastics that don't get recycled and use it with this plastic fungus method. We are not only helping break down unused plastic, but also making a new product with waste plastics.. MUSHROOMS WHERE THE ANSWER ALL Along!

    • @nekosaiyajin8529
      @nekosaiyajin8529 Před rokem +11

      Bro from where I'm from mushrooms are always the answer. Fungi, such great fucking beings.

    • @sh-zm7xl
      @sh-zm7xl Před 11 měsíci

      Paul Stamets uses fungus to clean up toxins and plastic.

  • @coryrabbit
    @coryrabbit Před rokem +19

    There are also mushrooms that can not only break plastic down into organic matter, they can survive solely on plastic in anaerobic conditions, making them ideal to use in oxygen poor landfills.

  • @vb0t429
    @vb0t429 Před 2 lety +1930

    Lets hope finding a mushroom island isn't hard

    • @TheDullNull
      @TheDullNull Před 2 lety +165

      The land of the Mushroom Cows conveniently named "Mooshrooms"

    • @corynn.l5146
      @corynn.l5146 Před 2 lety +123

      Did you know the largest living organism on earth is in fact a mushroom?

    • @michamicha1433
      @michamicha1433 Před 2 lety +46

      @@corynn.l5146 its.. it's a minecraft joke..

    • @notomnithegodking
      @notomnithegodking Před 2 lety +174

      @@michamicha1433 he's just giving facts

    • @pepearown4968
      @pepearown4968 Před 2 lety +18

      Nylium and the stems of giant Nether fungi are technically mycelium, too.

  • @speedyboi349
    @speedyboi349 Před 2 lety +849

    Imagine my motorcycle plastics being made out of mycelium
    The mushvroom 🍄

  • @mattews91
    @mattews91 Před rokem +69

    I love when ppl use bricks as an example of things that you can do with garbage. Its like if someone lost all his members and someone tell him: "well now you can be a door holder"

  • @BronzeOrwin
    @BronzeOrwin Před rokem +19

    everyone being forced to use the ecovative design design patents, if they want to persue the styrofoam technology, already seems like a massive issue if you want it to ever be competitive with plastic. the issue I'm noticing is that everyone wants to *feel good* about eco products, but not concern themselves with the issues of the industry's own creation

    • @Mordecrox
      @Mordecrox Před rokem +4

      It has always been about the Feel-good, a few procedures that happen to be cost-effective and beneficial for both companies can also be construed as environmental care are retrofitted as such
      One example being companies getting your used network cables from demolition and renovations and giving you credits for new products, if you meet a certain threshold they can emit a "friend of nature" certificate so both of you can pat each other on the back even though this is a profitable transaction for both sides and looking good to the public eye is just the cherry on the top

    • @shannabolser9428
      @shannabolser9428 Před rokem

      Patents expire. True it takes years but it will happen then this stuff will be everywhere

  • @jbj7799
    @jbj7799 Před 2 lety +1380

    Looks like HermitCraft’s Mycelium Resistance had a plan all along.

    • @kev6144
      @kev6144 Před 2 lety +131

      turns out it was HEP who were destroying the environment after all

    • @gabestr2077
      @gabestr2077 Před 2 lety +78

      I was looking for a Minecraft comment lmao.

    • @inventiveowl395
      @inventiveowl395 Před 2 lety +21

      @@gabestr2077 press X : *same*

    • @eisenheimabramovich617
      @eisenheimabramovich617 Před 2 lety +44

      Grian will be so proud to know it's working.

    • @ladymak4698
      @ladymak4698 Před 2 lety +20

      grian will win

  • @TurquoiseInk
    @TurquoiseInk Před 2 lety +1568

    I would happily live in a mycelium insulated home, wear mushroom leather and support businesses that used this packaging. Bring it on!

    • @speway
      @speway Před 2 lety +61

      Just note that if you ever decide you sit on a lawn, for an extended period of time, you will germinate.

    • @roberine7241
      @roberine7241 Před 2 lety +4

      @@speway what is "germinate"?

    • @speway
      @speway Před 2 lety +66

      @@roberine7241 It's a verb and one of the initial phases in the development of a a seed into maturity. It occurs just prior to root development. The context that I was using it in was a joke and in reply to the comment prior made by TurquoiseInk. It was just a bad joke. Have a great day!!

    • @roberine7241
      @roberine7241 Před 2 lety +10

      @@speway ah now I got it. thanks.

    • @speway
      @speway Před 2 lety +7

      @@roberine7241 (Thumbs Up)

  • @Ddvgh1
    @Ddvgh1 Před rokem +55

    I think it’s a good idea, but it’s a little too rare. Mushroom Islands are ultra rare, often with only one or two within even 10 thousand kilometers of spawn. On top of that, the yield is low from these, as the islands certainly aren’t big enough to provide the amount we’d need. I suppose you could go through the nether and use nylium, but there’s no telling if it’s even near the same quality.

    • @brukts3361
      @brukts3361 Před rokem +19

      goddammit, I had to google this to find out it was a minecraft reference. I am dumb

    • @fp_j_k
      @fp_j_k Před rokem +3

      @@brukts3361 same my dude

    • @zulhilmi5787
      @zulhilmi5787 Před rokem +5

      Dude have you even heard of a bone meal? You can make lots of that island with bone meal and to make things more interesting, you can have unlimited bone meal with a specific farm.

  • @ahlamamr4659
    @ahlamamr4659 Před 2 lety +14

    That is amazing. I wanted to use mycelium in an environmental architecture competition in my school but I didn’t really understand it thank you for clarifying things in simple way.

  • @christopherp.3307
    @christopherp.3307 Před 2 lety +593

    *falls over with new shoes
    "Are you ok?"
    "Yeah, I'm tripping on mushrooms!"
    Hahahaha..... please don't hurt me.

  • @jlruss9777
    @jlruss9777 Před 2 lety +251

    Anyone thats ever had to install or touch fiberglass insulation would probably say YES to this option.

    • @MrSteror
      @MrSteror Před 2 lety +6

      Good point, it's really itchy

    • @artemis_smith
      @artemis_smith Před 2 lety +34

      Idk, I HATE fiberglass but that stuff can last virtually forever. Idk about dead fungus. Seems vulnerable to getting eaten by animals, bacteria, and living fungi.

    • @cofal79
      @cofal79 Před 2 lety +13

      Its solved by washing in hot water, after you are done, if you have bare skin while working with this stuff... This is common knowledge for people that have been working with glasfiber insulation more than ones...
      Anyway Rockwool is not glasfiber and not that problematic as example Glava that is glasfiber.
      Also very flame resistant.
      So there is already natural products for the glasfiber ones.

    • @Trevin_Taylor
      @Trevin_Taylor Před 2 lety +7

      They fixed that. Modern insulation isn’t itchy anymore.

    • @TheConjurersTower
      @TheConjurersTower Před 2 lety +1

      Big fax.

  • @Kikuri_Dood
    @Kikuri_Dood Před rokem +9

    You can't say it's plant based if it is made out of mushroom, when then it's fungie based

  • @Kefuddle
    @Kefuddle Před rokem +100

    Having lived in Vietnam for some years, I have seen the plastic horrors of the South China Sea first hand. This is an amazing first step!

    • @iantaggart3064
      @iantaggart3064 Před měsícem +1

      And there are several initiatives like Ocean Cleanup to undo the damage already been done.

  • @VanuOfMILF
    @VanuOfMILF Před 2 lety +486

    As with most new solutions, the real question is "is it competitive at scale?"
    Doesn't matter how good the product is, if potential customers can't access it due to supply shortfalls.

    • @inventiveowl395
      @inventiveowl395 Před 2 lety +10

      Did you watch the video? :D

    • @WopSalad
      @WopSalad Před 2 lety +99

      ​@@inventiveowl395 Did it not seem odd to you he only said, "price competitive" instead of giving an actual price comparison? If it was really that small of a difference he would have given an actual price, instead of dancing around it. Until this product becomes cheaper than the current stuff it's going no where. You're only going to see mycelium packaging for high end products.

    • @Ben4A
      @Ben4A Před 2 lety +39

      @@WopSalad Yeah it only costs about half a cent to make a bottle of plastic while it probably cost one to $5 to make this mycelium thing So it's not price competitive at all

    • @ismailnyeyusof3520
      @ismailnyeyusof3520 Před 2 lety +55

      The slow manufacturing process likely means that the products are not cost competitive with ordinary plastic products, however, if the costs of plastic products are taken in total to include the environmental impact costs then mycelium products might actually be cheaper.

    • @WopSalad
      @WopSalad Před 2 lety +32

      @@ismailnyeyusof3520 ah, yes. Because billionaire CEOs often put the environment before profit. Nothing against those CEOs, that's their choice and at the end of the day probably the choice I'd make in their situation.

  • @unvergebeneid
    @unvergebeneid Před 2 lety +1780

    So the forms for the mycelium to grow in, are they called mold molds? ..... or mould moulds in the UK?

  • @unkarsthug4429
    @unkarsthug4429 Před rokem +10

    How do they ensure the complete removal of any spores? As someone on immunosuppressants, I've been specifically told to stay clear of fungus in particular if it could still be in a living state, or even if the fungus itself is dead, if there might be any spores still alive.

    • @calligraphy4244
      @calligraphy4244 Před rokem +5

      Maybe the heating process also kills off spores, although from the video, they’re transporting these blocks pretty openly, I wonder how much spores end up in an uncontrolled state. Do you think the dead fungi serve also serve as a new ground for spores to grow in?

    • @sutarn_gamer4159
      @sutarn_gamer4159 Před rokem +2

      @@calligraphy4244 Valid question there

  • @moohbosch2564
    @moohbosch2564 Před rokem +1

    Great video matt, thanks for sharing such clear and concise info about such a groundbreaking technology!!👍

  • @Riolunator
    @Riolunator Před 2 lety +612

    When you've been terraforming mountains using mycelium in Minecraft and want to justify it

  • @patricknelson
    @patricknelson Před 2 lety +545

    Speaking of foam, as a consumer, I *absolutely loathe* styrofoam with a passion (and that’s not even accounting for the environmental impacts). It makes such a massive mess and is impossible to break down. It can be super frustrating.

    • @stepcorngrumbleteats7683
      @stepcorngrumbleteats7683 Před 2 lety +14

      Acetone breaks it down super quick, leaving a blu-ish fluid that can be molded and reused...the product also takes up a LOT less space...about 20 to 1 with the Acetone able to be reused with a small amount of new fluid added. I have had minor successes with flet panels cut and assembled with either Acetone or EDC (ethylene dichloride)

    • @ellaslade140
      @ellaslade140 Před 2 lety +10

      superworms can turn it into organic matter.

    • @Lydaw
      @Lydaw Před 2 lety +21

      ​@@stepcorngrumbleteats7683 Gasoline can also break it down. The resulting mixture is napalm.

    • @sentesues9383
      @sentesues9383 Před 2 lety +1

      @@Lydaw I thought you needed a starch in there as well for for thickness and stickyness

    • @Yuki_Ika7
      @Yuki_Ika7 Před 2 lety +6

      I work at target and I too loathe Styrofoam, especially the cheap stuff, it crumbles and gets EVERYWHERE!

  • @gaiavoice
    @gaiavoice Před rokem +2

    Great piece, thank you, the most comprehensive assessment of mycelium's game-changing potential I've seen yet!

  • @Arran1994
    @Arran1994 Před rokem +1

    This is pretty huge, and absolutely fantastic. Thank you for covering such an interesting topic, and thank you for doing it in such an engaging and informative way. 🖖🏻

  • @Scott_C
    @Scott_C Před 2 lety +274

    This really feels like an underground technology.

  • @AidanS99
    @AidanS99 Před 2 lety +390

    I’ll never get behind metal and paper alternatives to plastic items due to their high production energy costs. Sometimes as much as 500 times the pollution into the atmosphere. But this is an actual win win product. Hope it gains traction.

    • @freddynovember5842
      @freddynovember5842 Před 2 lety +9

      3 words
      Mycelium 3-D Printer!

    • @PlanetaJuegosPC
      @PlanetaJuegosPC Před 2 lety +1

      But can you drink a liquid from a recipent made of mushrooms?

    • @MrDisgruntledGamer1
      @MrDisgruntledGamer1 Před 2 lety +3

      @@freddynovember5842 printer? mmm idk if that would work, it grows into a mold it cant be placed in a pattern. Plus molding technology is hundreds of times more cheaper than 3d printing

    • @phantamanta4453
      @phantamanta4453 Před 2 lety +10

      i doubt that it will happen. Right now the only Mycelium-Based Technology is under an license, meaning, that other companies have to pay to use it. If they really wanted to help, they would've created a new license, where nobody can monopolize onto it, yet keep costs down.
      It all comes down to companies being greedy instead of helpful. I am aware that creating things will cost stuff, yes, but somebody has to bite into the sour apple, or else things like this will just not be feasible, and people will just stay with Plastics instead.

    • @phantamanta4453
      @phantamanta4453 Před 2 lety +4

      Basically, to explain better, let's say, for example, 1Kg of Plastics is worth 50 cents in production, (Obviously not the actual costs, just examples), and Mycelium costs 20 cents in production. Sounds nice, doesn't it? Well, yes and no. You're paying 20 cents to produce it, then you have to pay the company who is monopolizing it, which can easily be a good 60-70 Cents for each Kilogram, meaning, in reality, you're paying 80-90 Cents for 1Kg of Mycelium, compared to 50 Cents for 1Kg of Plastics. obviously companies will stay with Plastics instead because Economy. Money first, World second.

  • @nathanleroi6736
    @nathanleroi6736 Před rokem

    Thanks Matt for all this useful condensed information! This is extremely relevant

  • @biblequotesdaily6618
    @biblequotesdaily6618 Před rokem +11

    these innovations are a great step forward, but i honestly dont think we're gonna put a single dent in the behemoth plastic industry unless we change our economic policies. plastic is just so profitable the downsides are incomparable.

  • @gabrielquinterohoyos9151
    @gabrielquinterohoyos9151 Před 2 lety +747

    The fact that this technology was developed in 2006 and I'm just recently hearing about it it's kind of concerning.

    • @KelpWolf
      @KelpWolf Před 2 lety +85

      It's hard to start up. When demand is low, the economies of scale make it really expensive compared to plastic-based materials. Also, oil gets a lot of subsidies from federal gov'ts around the world--makes the marketplace unfair to any product competing with plastic.

    • @lancetheking7524
      @lancetheking7524 Před 2 lety +25

      if lets say, China, India, the US, or just the entirety of Southeast Asia, had there governments fund people enough to make these sorta stuff... then we would be able to massively produce this to wonder glory

    • @jeffreyfoster472
      @jeffreyfoster472 Před 2 lety +21

      Big Plastic hates this one trick.

    • @cryptotic5257
      @cryptotic5257 Před 2 lety +38

      Because whenever there is a new discovery it means nothing due to pre existing infrastructure. New tech means they have to update their multi-decade old processes and that worries insecure businessmen and women since they are worried about making max profits at every opportunity and their fragile go hangs on the thread of money made that day.

    • @tkangwei
      @tkangwei Před 2 lety +13

      The journey from development to mass production takes time, especially an entirely novel technology with no similar equivalencies to serve as reference.

  • @Datdus92
    @Datdus92 Před 2 lety +420

    "There's mold in the walls" house buyer: "Great!"

    • @TheDragonfriday
      @TheDragonfriday Před 2 lety +18

      The house is mold

    • @jerrywhidby.
      @jerrywhidby. Před 2 lety +9

      And now I know that mold is a fungi. Thanks.

    • @JohnSmith-ns6dp
      @JohnSmith-ns6dp Před 2 lety +7

      “Breaks down within 45 days underground…” Me who just used it to insulate my basement: 😳

    • @jerrywhidby.
      @jerrywhidby. Před 2 lety +5

      @@josephb3147 and Britannica says you're wrong. Mold is a mycelium. www.britannica.com/science/mold-fungus

    • @jerrywhidby.
      @jerrywhidby. Před 2 lety +3

      @@JohnSmith-ns6dp seriously what do they treat it with to prevent rot?

  • @lamegame2218
    @lamegame2218 Před rokem +1

    Honestly, packaging like this would give me that final push I needed to switch to shopping mostly online. I get exactly what I want, AND mulch for my lawn 😁

  • @pointnemo72
    @pointnemo72 Před 2 lety

    Hell yeah! This looks to be an amazing advancement. Fungus definitely appears to have an enormous amount of unlocked potential.

  • @ruffaldimarco
    @ruffaldimarco Před 2 lety +584

    Nobody asking the real question: can we eat the packaging?

  • @clabatross3064
    @clabatross3064 Před 2 lety +22

    The problem with fungus is that there are so many known mycotoxins and likely even more unknown mycotoxins. For instance, the some Fusarium species are used in fake meat products, but I believe most species in the same genus are known to have harmful mycotoxins. Aflatoxins (produced by Aspergillosis species) are known to be toxic to liver cells and are heavily correlated with cancer and liver cirrhosis. The point is, different species and genus of fungi produce all kinds of different chemicals that we have no idea how they effect the body.
    I'm not saying fungi based plastics wouldn't be better than petroleum based plastics which probably have an effect on the endocrine system. The industrial uses for fungi seem pretty cool, but I would use caution when using fungi for packaging food or water.
    I am not an expert, but I took a few mycology classes in college. There is so much we don't know and so many undiscovered species. I think caution is warranted for packaging food. If someone knows more please comment.

    • @iris7484
      @iris7484 Před 2 lety +5

      thanks for this. It's so easy to watch a cool video and be like "YES ALL THE PROBLEMS ARE SOLVED!!!" but it's good to get a non-pessimistic reality check to remember that it's more complicated. That said, In the age of amazon, though, _just_ the application as a shipping material is exciting. I helped a friend unpack a wayfair couch last year and dear god...i felt like the hole in the ozone was opening directly over their house.

  • @michaelkeister8689
    @michaelkeister8689 Před rokem

    This is an incredible new material! I can't wait to test out some of the products that will created by this plastics alternative.

  • @therealsaln0217
    @therealsaln0217 Před rokem +19

    This all sounds amazing and I hope it is ultimately successful. I also hope there isn't a second wave of eating tide pods, which would take the form of kids eating their mycelium shoes.

  • @wizdude
    @wizdude Před 2 lety +308

    Use of this for packaging would be such a huge win for everyone. Most items we receive come with so much unrecyclable material and in the “new world” we live in now, we will continue to order and have goods shipped to us in larger quantities and more frequently.

    • @pilky_boooi
      @pilky_boooi Před 2 lety +4

      it is a terrbile loss for people who get rich from plastics

    • @Porabany
      @Porabany Před 2 lety +3

      The 3/4 of plastic waste, mostly in the ocean, is made by Asian countries.
      Even if we will stop using plastic completely, it will not change our situation due to growing countries that dont have the capital to recycle properly.

    • @BigHotSauceBoss69
      @BigHotSauceBoss69 Před 2 lety +3

      @@Porabany Hey you're not allowed to say that. The narrative is that America does everything wrong

    • @_R_R_R
      @_R_R_R Před 2 lety +5

      @@pilky_boooi thats the problem, they are going to push for the use of plastic. They will spread false information about the mushroom stuff

    • @pilky_boooi
      @pilky_boooi Před 2 lety +1

      @@_R_R_R yeah I know

  • @pb7857
    @pb7857 Před 2 lety +458

    When you mentioned housing, my first thought was my house would be growing mushrooms due to the wet environment I live in. I'm both glad to know that the material is already dead, and disappointed I wouldn't get a free crop of mushrooms :)

    • @David13ushey
      @David13ushey Před 2 lety +29

      Growing your own mushrooms is ridiculously easy in certain locals. I've got a tray I harvest a half dozen from every day. Just replace the organic fertilizer every year and you can keep eating the same mushrooms (an no, it doesn't have to be manure. There are plant waste fertilizers out there.). Just has to be not to hot, not too dry, and not too wet. Best of all, you can grow them out of sunlight. It might just be me, but they also seem to grow best in quiet. Not sure if that's a factor or not. I have mine in a basement garden I maintain with hydroponics, but the mushroom tray was long before I put in the hydro system.

    • @Anjiwee12
      @Anjiwee12 Před 2 lety +9

      @@David13ushey Daaaaamn it’s that easy? I would be your neighbor and I’ll make a bunch of spaghetti for you.

    • @David13ushey
      @David13ushey Před 2 lety +14

      @@Anjiwee12 Soooo yes and no. Remember how it has to be not too hot, not too cold, not too wet, and not too dry? It takes a bit of effort to keep it in the sweet spot. I use four thermometers and four moisture sensors to keep the tray stable. But once you find it and the mat is established, it's pretty regular. Depends on what kind of mushrooms you grow too. There's some more exotic varieties you can grow on logs and the like with a more nutty flavor. I grow cremimis. I know some folks that try to grow shitake but they're a lot more fussy. There's tons of variety. It's just making a nice stable place for the mushroom of your choice.
      OH! One other warning. When you're making your bed, keep it very clean. An environment good for mushrooms is also good for other fungi, namely mold. You want to keep the bed itself clean and as moisture free as possible.

    • @planetearth8044
      @planetearth8044 Před 2 lety +13

      @@David13ushey When you were giving your last warning, I thought for a moment that you meant the bead you _sleep_ in, not the bed you _grow mushrooms in._
      I was willing to accept that too, as I thought " Yeah that makes sense, if one disperses spores before you can prune it you don't want mushrooms growing on your bed"
      It was only after I reread it twice I understood

    • @joshoxborrow2314
      @joshoxborrow2314 Před 2 lety +1

      Can I just grow the insulation right in my walls?

  • @skperform
    @skperform Před rokem +13

    I wonder what mice and other rodents would think of mycelium home insulation?

  • @Aatell764
    @Aatell764 Před rokem +14

    Wow this is incredible, if this ain't the solution I don't know what is.

  • @Respectable_Username
    @Respectable_Username Před 2 lety +393

    "It's about the principle" - Mycelium Resistance

  • @Terx37
    @Terx37 Před 2 lety +668

    This technology is so simple ! Imagine how the world would have looked like if someone discovered this before plastics
    Edit: I did not mean to say that this was superior to plastics in every way, just that if we knew of this sooner, we could have had a good alternative to plastics decades, maybe even centuries sooner, as the production of such a material would not require the advanced knowledge in chemistry as the production of plastic would. Im not saying its better than plastics, its not, as it is only aplicable in a few things, all I am saying is that if this was discovered, lets say by accident, in the 17th century, it could have started a completely new era.

    • @deadwingdomain
      @deadwingdomain Před 2 lety +9

      All about that funding

    • @darkwingduck47
      @darkwingduck47 Před 2 lety +18

      what about capacity though? it takes a week to complete the process...too slow...

    • @maythesciencebewithyou
      @maythesciencebewithyou Před 2 lety +10

      not that different. We'd still be using plastics, because this can't replace all plastics. This has it's place, like replacing styroform packaging, but many other things you wouldn't want to be made of this. Also, you can make plastic stuff much quicker, so companies would still have preferred using plastics.

    • @Auoric
      @Auoric Před 2 lety +32

      We proposed this to our research adviser but they rejected our proposal because it's "impossible". When this tech conquers the industry I'll be sure to be back at their office and slap them with newspapers covering this.

    • @syndrome5372
      @syndrome5372 Před 2 lety +2

      not great, since its far slower and more expensive to manufacture, and it rots. it's also not transparent, pretty much definitely considerably weaker than plastic, is'nt waterproof, probably has a funny smell to it since it is essentially dead rotting plant matter, it would make anything it is packaged with wet and slimy as its a mycillium, would be full of bugs since it's a weave rather than a solid object, and it pretty much just not fit for purpose at all.
      its the same as all of these "saving the planet" ideas. sounds nice...totally impractical and doesn't hold up to scrutiny.

  • @johnnynephrite6147
    @johnnynephrite6147 Před rokem

    You're always so glee and smiling about the next great thing that never happens.

  • @nichalosreid8871
    @nichalosreid8871 Před rokem +1

    This is amazing, give it 10 more years and we can start to see better changes to the environment. This form of innovation will save many and this world

  • @ndawesome1
    @ndawesome1 Před 2 lety +323

    Every one of these videos gives me an "I want it now" reaction. The possibilities exposed by new research are endless, but take a long time to come to market and become widely accepted.

    • @Beakerbite
      @Beakerbite Před 2 lety +31

      The biggest issue is that all the plastic manufacturing machines are already built. Even if a new product came out that was ridiculously perfect in every way, but incompatible with current injection molding, we'd still see it take decades for the market to migrate. They aren't going to throw away working machines until they are no longer profitable to operate.

    • @nahuelcutrera
      @nahuelcutrera Před 2 lety +34

      @@Beakerbite that's where government should come in, enforce measures about leaving plastic behind and even give subsides to companies that need them for the change of infrastructure. But they won't do that because they don't give a damn and they are all corrupt from top to bottom.

    • @walterbaltzley4546
      @walterbaltzley4546 Před 2 lety +5

      Product cycle times keep getting shorter and shorter as computer modeling and 3D-Printing bring down development times and costs. China just introduced a wafer-sized processor that is essentially an entire data-center on a single piece of silicon -- ONE TRILLION transistors on a single chip... That is the equivalent of 1,000 PC's on a disk the size of a large pizza... Stack ten thousand of those, and you have more processing power than exists on the entire planet. With that kind of computing power, you could model a thousand generations of product development before you build your first prototype. In just a few years, you can skip the awkward stumbling and develop an optimized product in the same time it takes to build a prototype today.

    • @Justwantahover
      @Justwantahover Před 2 lety +8

      @@Beakerbite The NSW govt in Australia wants to ban all disposable plastics and if all countries did that the plastics factories would be forced to abandon their machines or convert them somehow (when it comes to disposable plastic shit).

    • @RandyRandersonthefamous
      @RandyRandersonthefamous Před 2 lety +5

      Government can fix it, if it stops trying to give "free" things out and buying tanks

  • @epictoast6727
    @epictoast6727 Před 2 lety +545

    I'd pay a little extra if a company used this instead of normal packaging.

    • @rjc0234
      @rjc0234 Před 2 lety +12

      you say a little extra, but the last time (about 8 years ago) I saw this technology, you were looking at 30x the amount. You are already paying about £10 for the packaging for your £300 TV, do you want to pay more for the packaging for your TV than for you TV? And also Polymer packaging for that TV can be produced and packed in hours, vs the week it takes to just grow the mycelium. Time is what kills this for most people. Some smaller companies (notice how almost everything packed was expensive wine) are OK with it, but the price for 3million TV packs, it might be cheaper for that company to invest in a waste return scheme where they collect the packaging after delivery.

    • @epictoast6727
      @epictoast6727 Před 2 lety +25

      @@rjc0234 bud, I said a little extra because I ment I'd be willing to spend a little extra and not alot extra. If it's alot extra I'd opt for a standard packed item given the option.

    • @epictoast6727
      @epictoast6727 Před 2 lety +3

      @@gypsy_haas5869 that would be the best of both worlds if ya ask me.

    • @allancoelho6905
      @allancoelho6905 Před 2 lety +4

      Like, its cheaper than plastic right? So we would pay less i guess

    • @rjc0234
      @rjc0234 Před 2 lety +7

      @@epictoast6727 But this isn't "a little extra" this is a lot extra. You want a sustainable future you are going to have to pay for it.

  • @garfield1079
    @garfield1079 Před rokem

    Thanks for making this video, it was super interesting!

  • @MorenoCamionero
    @MorenoCamionero Před 2 lety +2

    There is a book anticipating this!!
    Thank you for this video. In 2019 a French medium wrote about how is most likely gonna be life on earth in about a hundred years. One of the many things he explained is that buildings were gonna be made of a material that is made of fungus and some metals, with incredible properties like self repairing and reactive to the environment. Seemingly we won't need to wait a hundred years for that. I'm so excited!! (Other advantages will be the reciclability of buildings once not in use and that they are biocompatible and thus more respectful with our own health when being inside).

  • @TheBangooman
    @TheBangooman Před 2 lety +148

    I wish companies just replaced plastics for this as much as possible, without asking and without us having to do shit. Just like they replaced previous materials without asking. Down 100% with this. Mycelium all the way baby!

    • @-Devy-
      @-Devy- Před 2 lety +9

      It's all about the $$.

    • @mave2789
      @mave2789 Před 2 lety +6

      @@-Devy- it always was, and it will always be. Until the humanity ends itself

    • @BenjamintYT
      @BenjamintYT Před 2 lety +9

      @@mave2789 Exactly. Humanity is so focused on money that they don't stop to look at how they earn it. We destroy our planet, pollute our atmosphere, all for a piece of paper that is only worth something beacuse a group of people decided so.

    • @mave2789
      @mave2789 Před 2 lety +7

      @@BenjamintYT Endless greed, in a limited world

    • @chiefsam34
      @chiefsam34 Před 2 lety +1

      Not to mention what we are doing to ourselves and other people during those processes

  • @kenyenmusic7548
    @kenyenmusic7548 Před 2 lety +77

    As someone who was just researching the mushrooms that can eat a diet solely of plastic, thank you so much for this video.

    • @saif-gv6gl
      @saif-gv6gl Před 2 lety

      w8 so mushroom can eat plastics?

    • @kazikek2674
      @kazikek2674 Před 2 lety +8

      @@saif-gv6gl Fungal organisms have a lot of oddities and wide potential applications. Since there's a fungus in Chernobyl that 'eats' the radiation, a fungus able to utilize plastic for its bioprocesses does not surprise me at all.

  • @scottmcmaster4927
    @scottmcmaster4927 Před rokem +4

    There is another alternative that uses recaptured CO2 from the air fed to water based algae that then produce a material that can be used to produce a plastic alternative with most of the same properties that can be used to produce the same sort of products and biodegrades within a few years. A great alternative for disposable items such as straws, shopping bags, disposable cutlery.

  • @tygerinthenight3255
    @tygerinthenight3255 Před rokem +1

    I watched a show on Curiosity Stream that talked about this mycelium technology and it was really interesting, but I don't remember it presenting it as an alternative to plastic packaging so this is really cool. It spoke mostly about its uses as a new building material and I think it mentioned the possibility of treatments that would make a brick of fungus comparable to a brick of concrete in terms of weight baring. I really need to watch that show again.
    Edit: For anyone curious, I just looked up what show that was. Its called Evolve and the episode that discusses mycelium technology was one of the middle episode. I wanna say ep 3 but it could've been 4.

  • @Swordkirby9999
    @Swordkirby9999 Před 2 lety +517

    If that's the case, then Minecraft has a huge potential for new items

    • @pepearown4968
      @pepearown4968 Před 2 lety +18

      Especially since there’s three types of mycelium in the game.

    • @prav2568
      @prav2568 Před 2 lety +2

      @Random Things ok

    • @sporttube69
      @sporttube69 Před 2 lety +8

      Plastic block 🥵

    • @pepearown4968
      @pepearown4968 Před 2 lety +3

      @Random Things If you use hyphae planks in a build, and make it large, then it’s technically a mushroom mansion.

    • @JustinRed624
      @JustinRed624 Před 2 lety

      shroomite

  • @user-ze7tl2dw4i
    @user-ze7tl2dw4i Před 2 lety +715

    "Mycelium fungus" is like saying root plant or skin animal.

    • @krabgaming8523
      @krabgaming8523 Před 2 lety +53

      We do say root plant

    • @Sillyhands1
      @Sillyhands1 Před 2 lety +88

      There are non fruiting nonmycelium fungi, so this is an important distinction and completely correct.

    • @ahorseofcourse7283
      @ahorseofcourse7283 Před 2 lety +31

      I AM A SKIN HUMAN

    • @DMSProduktions
      @DMSProduktions Před 2 lety +17

      @@ahorseofcourse7283 4 skin?

    • @Pope_
      @Pope_ Před 2 lety +5

      storing my food using human skin 😳

  • @asheshdutta
    @asheshdutta Před rokem +1

    I would love to live in a mycelium insulated house for sure.. anything for mother nature. Great information, thanks for sharing.

  • @rosekincade8528
    @rosekincade8528 Před 10 měsíci

    All of what was stated sounds great, I would welcome the opportunity with open arms.

  • @michaelstone7626
    @michaelstone7626 Před 2 lety +198

    I like wearing my mycelium hat to parties because it makes me a fungi

  • @genzedaph2417
    @genzedaph2417 Před 2 lety +351

    Grian be like:
    SPREAD THE SPORE

    • @Kaizuo
      @Kaizuo Před 2 lety +6

      yes i was thinking this

    • @gerardprescilla3440
      @gerardprescilla3440 Před 2 lety +7

      Grain

    • @JD_1776
      @JD_1776 Před 2 lety +10

      ITS ABOUT THE PRINCIPLE

    • @Kilo-sz4ch
      @Kilo-sz4ch Před 2 lety +2

      @@gerardprescilla3440 dont be a grammer nazi, he isnt even talking about grain. Grian is a person

    • @colinouille2786
      @colinouille2786 Před 2 lety +11

      @@Kilo-sz4ch who is this grain character

  • @jasperfox6821
    @jasperfox6821 Před rokem

    It's things like this that give me hope for the future, something like this could replace plastic for good. No long damaging the environment has much.

  • @ariadna2018
    @ariadna2018 Před rokem +1

    Thank you Matt! This video is amazing!!! It's unbelievable to know we have this wonderful alternative to plastics....waw! 🤠 If I have the choice between something ecologically friendly and something that's not...I don't hesitate!! I think it's easy for us to make a good choice...🐸👌

  • @fredbach6039
    @fredbach6039 Před 2 lety +23

    A young fellow tested polystyrene as a food for several organisms and found a worm that eats and digests polystyrene for food, and thrives on it. We should be pushing that technology too.

    • @blueturborider
      @blueturborider Před 2 lety +2

      yeah, and the by-product of that was antifreeze which is also no recyclable and toxic

    • @walterbaltzley4546
      @walterbaltzley4546 Před 2 lety +5

      @@blueturborider That word non-recyclable is a misnomer -- It is not PROFITABLY recyclable... Matter is made of energy, which can neither b created nor destroyed, only converted to another form... The energy required to break the chemical bonds and then combine them with something else to make it stable and non-toxic costs more than the final product is worth. Everything is recyclable, not everything can be recycled PROFITABLY.

    • @timothyduffy8818
      @timothyduffy8818 Před 2 lety +1

      @@blueturborider if it turns to antifreeze it is just molecules composed of Carbon and Hydrogen or Hydrogen and Oxygen, which then can be broken apart with energy.

    • @That-No-Moon
      @That-No-Moon Před 2 lety +1

      Another good thing to get rid of plastics is a fungus called Pestalotiopsis microspora that also converts plastics.

    • @blueturborider
      @blueturborider Před 2 lety

      My point is that you can't reduce anti freeze ( if you can I don't if can and after reading the comments under I wonder how energy efficient that is) other point is that I don't think you can reuse. I might be wrong

  • @leonardolondero8135
    @leonardolondero8135 Před 2 lety +174

    Fast forward to 50 years and we're all gonna become druids.

  • @AlxndrHQ
    @AlxndrHQ Před rokem

    Eye opening. Thanks for sharing

  • @TimothyMorigeau
    @TimothyMorigeau Před rokem +2

    Amazing! Nature seems to always give us what we need.

  • @DoctorX17
    @DoctorX17 Před 2 lety +72

    Considering it's biodegradable, I'd have some concerns using it as a permanent building material, but certainly it's perfect for replacing single use plastics. Although for building, it might be great for short term pavilions -- grow a small building in a week, and a few months later it's just dirt, and if it's in a forest, no need to even remove it!

    • @lampostsamurai2518
      @lampostsamurai2518 Před 2 lety +14

      Wood is also biodegradable. Still make houses it of it

    • @DoctorX17
      @DoctorX17 Před 2 lety +21

      @@lampostsamurai2518 fair... Although wood doesn't turn to dirt in 45 days. Plus it's usually treated to increase strength and/or durability

    • @joedibble4199
      @joedibble4199 Před 2 lety +8

      I’d have concerns of rot and insect infestation if used as insulation. For that matter rodent infestation?

    • @RedPilledDaddy
      @RedPilledDaddy Před 2 lety +1

      @@DoctorX17 Its like you didnt even watch the video. He explains how it can be used for construction

    • @priceward2167
      @priceward2167 Před 2 lety +3

      @@DoctorX17 maybe I missed it but I didn’t see the video say it turned into dirt in 45 days? The only issue with it as a building structure, is that it isn’t very strong compared to wood or concrete.

  • @PluralPaul
    @PluralPaul Před 2 lety +174

    I'm all in for this stuff. Clothing/wearables-wise, mycelium might help cut-down on waste in the clothing industry through constant manufacture of shoes, and the like. My hope is that shoe companies will stop endlessly pumping out new shoes that might never be worn, and realize they can still have a decent flow of income by selling replacement soles and other components that often drive people to buy new shoes, effectively making shoe repairs more affordable yet profitable. We already have algae foam, so it's about time mycelium steps into the spotlight.

    • @freddybell8328
      @freddybell8328 Před 2 lety +3

      Shoes respond to trends and trends change. People don't want to repair their ten year old pair of shoes that are no longer stylish.

    • @thejinn99
      @thejinn99 Před 2 lety +3

      @@freddybell8328 This isn't true for all customers though, right? I know personally, after I've found a shoe/boot that I like, I'll go back and buy that same model again and again. I guess it helps that those styles are seen as classics. I mean, its either that or I don't really care too much about looking very stylish.

    • @maythesciencebewithyou
      @maythesciencebewithyou Před 2 lety +1

      It's the people who go and buy the latest fashion even if their old stuff is still fine. Try telling people they shouldn't buy so many shoes, especially to women who really like shoes, they really won't like it.
      These mycelium shoes won't last very long either.

    • @whichDude
      @whichDude Před 2 lety

      @@freddybell8328 Maybe people would replace normal shoes, but being able to cheaply repair actual working shoes would be great. Most people don't wear steel toe shoes or kitchen shoes for style. They wear them because they serve a purpose often job related. Some jobs wear out shoes rather fast.

    • @sachabinky2915
      @sachabinky2915 Před 2 lety

      Soles don't wear out like the bodies do, joggers usually rip

  • @justinsander7654
    @justinsander7654 Před 8 měsíci +1

    Hemp polymers for clear plastics the byproduct of which can be used for the base component to grow the Mycelium plastics.

  • @jamespkinsella5018
    @jamespkinsella5018 Před rokem

    Great presentation amazing possibilities. I'm really going to share this.

  • @suryaananth2744
    @suryaananth2744 Před 2 lety +553

    Video: "Mycelium fungus can be used for computing circuits"
    me: having resident evil village memories

  • @parabolicazero2775
    @parabolicazero2775 Před 2 lety +815

    Sounds absolutely promising. The beginning of a new era where the technology is biological.

    • @freddynovember5842
      @freddynovember5842 Před 2 lety +40

      3 words
      Mycelium 3-D Printer!

    • @yousufal-rashidguro270
      @yousufal-rashidguro270 Před 2 lety +5

      @@freddynovember5842 GENIUS

    • @hikerieger6319
      @hikerieger6319 Před 2 lety +8

      @@freddynovember5842 We need this

    • @nitroxylictv
      @nitroxylictv Před 2 lety +14

      Sounds like a good idea to have everything be made out of biodegradable products. I cant wait for my TV and my sofa to disintegrate! I might as well start a bio-engineered product company, because I will make trillions of off planned obsolescence.

    • @freddynovember5842
      @freddynovember5842 Před 2 lety +12

      @@nitroxylictv start a biodegradable propane and propane accessories store lol

  • @ssake1_IAL_Research
    @ssake1_IAL_Research Před rokem

    We need this yesterday.

  • @psicologiajoseh
    @psicologiajoseh Před rokem

    This gives a lot of hope!

  • @dancingoctopussmead
    @dancingoctopussmead Před 2 lety +323

    Great presentation. I remember doing some research on these products back in college to test their susceptibility to termite damage. Interesting to see this industry becoming more mainstream.

    • @dancingoctopussmead
      @dancingoctopussmead Před 2 lety +27

      @@jamesmcquitty95 Termites would eat into them but overall held up pretty well. Especially when compared to the control which was pine wood. It did seem that if the environment was too wet they were quite susceptible to having mold grow that the wood did not have an issue with. this was a while ago so my memory on all the findings might not be perfect.

    • @acadianheatingandair3291
      @acadianheatingandair3291 Před 2 lety

      I was wondering how it holds up to termites so what's the answer please respond

    • @ericsagen5229
      @ericsagen5229 Před 2 lety

      There's actually a fungi that is a death sentence for termites. They have been busy as of late turning this fungi's into pest control for other bugs that are useless and bothersome to humans. Mushrooms are the future!!!

    • @socalpotato
      @socalpotato Před rokem +2

      Surely some plant-based component can be mixed in which deters insects? Like lavender’s usefulness against garden annoyances.

    • @dancingoctopussmead
      @dancingoctopussmead Před rokem +3

      @@socalpotato Possibly but I was simply testing the base material so they had a control line to reference. I do not know if they continued with the research and I don't remember the companies name so I can't look it up either.

  • @madeofmandrake1748
    @madeofmandrake1748 Před 2 lety +518

    I could feel my faith in humanity restore as I watched this video. A smile grew across my face as I continued to watch. As a biochem student I could not be happier with this technology. I hope we see this tech become normal across the world.

    • @ookayokay
      @ookayokay Před 2 lety +23

      Recently I saw many cool things on CZcams. There are a lot of people doing interesting stuff. I think the mass of bullshit is just overshadowing us.

    • @userurirhhrududjd
      @userurirhhrududjd Před 2 lety +10

      @@ookayokay that's true. Even tho there's so much shit out there, there are still people out there who are doing genuinely good things to help us.

    • @forreal_suckers
      @forreal_suckers Před 2 lety +1

      @@userurirhhrududjd exactly! There has been recent studies over the years of scientists making cement with microorganisms. Like imagine you driving on a road of cement that secretly has billions, probably trillions of microorganisms that are feeding off of Co2 instead of spitting it out! Like dont even lie that sounds fuckin cool

    • @Joe.8671
      @Joe.8671 Před 2 lety +3

      Don't put faith in humans put faith in God everything man does fucks up everything

    • @qaz3433
      @qaz3433 Před rokem +21

      @@Joe.8671 wrong

  • @blinco1539
    @blinco1539 Před rokem +4

    I really dislike the amount of power Amazon has, but if they were to use this technology I really think we would see almost every other company follow suit which would reduce plastic waste by crazy amounts! Also acoustic insulation is something that’s often overlooked so thank you for looking into that! I feel like noise is a big issue in large cities, not only because of the amount of sounds happening, but because I imagine sounds bounce off of the buildings and concrete. By building stuff out of these materials we could reduce noise pollution too!

    • @julianweiser9985
      @julianweiser9985 Před rokem

      I loved their application of cardboard tape. Now i use it too. Its much easier to work with than standard plastic tape because it doesnt stick to itself as much.

  • @johncunningham4820
    @johncunningham4820 Před rokem

    Fascinating stuff . Definitely a Technology that SHOULD be pursued .

  • @notgonnapay
    @notgonnapay Před 2 lety +112

    We have people making mycelium foam, yet Amazon can’t help but send me a different package for every item I order.

    • @VaxtorT
      @VaxtorT Před 2 lety +10

      Stop ordering from Amazon. They commit to sending a percentage of their profits to questionable charities.

    • @OreganoParsley
      @OreganoParsley Před 2 lety +1

      @@VaxtorT so?

    • @VaxtorT
      @VaxtorT Před 2 lety +9

      @@OreganoParsley I do not expect everyone to give a damn; but many folk who are concerned about the future of the family unit and our Nation do give a damn. Families are the building blocks of a strong, productive, resourceful Nation. Destroy the family....destroy the nation. Amazon donates millions to charities that work to undermine and destroy the American family

    • @bitraboj722
      @bitraboj722 Před 2 lety +6

      @@VaxtorT you need to be in the right place with the right audience and in the right time to be able to convince anyone, and the CZcams comment section isn't the place for that, not saying that what you're saying doesn't matter but that this isn't the greatest place for that, it just looks out of place.

    • @VaxtorT
      @VaxtorT Před 2 lety

      @@bitraboj722 I cannot help it. It is so disturbing to see so many who are so thoroughly indoctrinated by the the mainstream narrative. Perhaps commenting on you tube is not the best place.....but it is presently the only forum I have since being paralyzed a few years ago.

  • @NoobixCube
    @NoobixCube Před 2 lety +25

    I’d like to see mycelium coffee cups. People have moved from polystyrene ones to paper cups, but the lamination and treatment required to make paper cups that don’t immediately collapse and drench your hands in boiling hot coffee make them as much an environmental disaster as polystyrene. Perhaps more, because in many places you can’t actually recycle paper cups as you would other paper and cardboard, so they end up contaminating recyclable waste, while polystyrene cups always ends up in discarded waste, never contaminating recycling loads.

    • @NicolasMendoula
      @NicolasMendoula Před 2 lety

      Ohhh yes or mycelium straws

    • @NoobixCube
      @NoobixCube Před 2 lety +1

      @@ChaosSwissroIl personally I keep a travel mug in my backpack. I don't always have my backpack, and would like a more sustainable solution when I want a cup of tea and can't spare the time to stop and have it in a normal mug. All I know for sure is paper cups are not that solution. Polystyrene has its problems, and is definitely worse, but it shouldn't be this close a call. I'll take a mycelium cup any day over both.

    • @NoobixCube
      @NoobixCube Před 2 lety +1

      @@ChaosSwissroIl I guess it's fine, if you don't count the emissions in producing it, or the complete lack of biodegradability, or the source of the petrochemical it's made of.

    • @chickenfootlicker
      @chickenfootlicker Před 2 lety

      Imagine edible cup

    • @DatBisa
      @DatBisa Před 2 lety +3

      @@ChaosSwissroIl The problem with plastics isn't the sustainability of production, but the sustainability of disposal. We either burn that shit, releasing all kinds of nasty shit into the atmosphere, or just leave it lying around where it could take 100s of years to slowly degrade. Mycelium on the other hand would either burn up almost entirely into CO², adding only as much back into the atmosphere as was used in the production of the material itself (growing the biowaste and mycelium for the material), or just going straight back to the earth in less than a month.
      You completely missed the point on production as well, if existing mycelium replacements already vastly outperform their polymer counterparts as noted in the video, then there's no reason to keep going with plastics on that front too.

  • @zerxilk8169
    @zerxilk8169 Před 2 lety

    Great video and info.

  • @orusandornots1915
    @orusandornots1915 Před 2 lety

    You glide over the cons while extolling it's virtues. I like these types of videos better when the information is balanced.

  • @majesticctrees
    @majesticctrees Před 2 lety +37

    There’s a place close to my hometown called Mushroom Mountain. They’ve been researching and creating construction materials with mycelium like cinder blocks and insulation. My biology class took a field trip there and it was probably the coolest thing I’ve seen.

    • @TheNinja94a
      @TheNinja94a Před 2 lety +4

      Idk how you can answer my curiosity as to where it is without doxxing yourself/family but it'd be pretty cool if ya could.
      Edit: didn't realize that you named it in the title, found it.

  • @Misaka-gt5yj
    @Misaka-gt5yj Před 2 lety +370

    Fungivores be like: "It's free real estate"

    • @metalrain300
      @metalrain300 Před 2 lety +9

      Fungi have always been one of my favorite things. I love mushrooms. This makes me happy as it supports something I really like.

    • @metroboonk5961
      @metroboonk5961 Před 2 lety +1

      @@metalrain300 it really isnt you know

    • @metroboonk5961
      @metroboonk5961 Před 2 lety

      @@metalrain300 well it is but the only thing thats being helped is us not the mushrooms. Mushrooms can feel pain. Atleast theyll die for a good cause.

    • @metalrain300
      @metalrain300 Před 2 lety +11

      @@metroboonk5961 everything that is living feels pain. What you gotta learn is what evils are you willing to risk. Their death aren’t in vain and help us tremendously.
      This is the Way

    • @metroboonk5961
      @metroboonk5961 Před 2 lety

      @@metalrain300 and not only us but countless other animals that are being affected by plastic

  • @Goober_gobbler
    @Goober_gobbler Před rokem +1

    I think its interesting how we discovered plastic before the mycelium plastic. Shows how little we payed attention to funguses scientifically, and to nature.

  • @JimmyD718
    @JimmyD718 Před rokem

    Another awesome video. Thanks :)

  • @SonOfKukusan
    @SonOfKukusan Před 2 lety +103

    me, a hermitcraft audience, would expect something like mycelium vs grass

    • @arventus
      @arventus Před 2 lety +3

      well we ALSO have seagrass as alternative to plastic,and its edible

    • @danielegerton9890
      @danielegerton9890 Před 2 lety +1

      Order from IG @Mycohenry33 and thank me later

  • @MikeDaner2630
    @MikeDaner2630 Před 2 lety +244

    So, if anyone knows the game Dwarf Fortress: this is basically elf crafting

    • @simonwesterlund2151
      @simonwesterlund2151 Před 2 lety +11

      This sounds like some dnd underdark technology 🤣

    • @KainYusanagi
      @KainYusanagi Před 2 lety +19

      More like Deep Dwarf crafting. Remember that elves hate you harvesting cave mushrooms for "wood", too. unless you just mean the "here's a mold to have it grow to shape" bit.

    • @ghanphol
      @ghanphol Před 2 lety +5

      Which means we need to burn whoever came up with it
      I refuse to use anything those filthy tree hugging cannibals do

    • @bow-tiedengineer4453
      @bow-tiedengineer4453 Před 2 lety +3

      @@KainYusanagi I think he meant the grow to shape bit.

    • @TheDragonLord12341
      @TheDragonLord12341 Před 2 lety +2

      Dude that game is fucking nuts...

  • @claymarzobestgoofy
    @claymarzobestgoofy Před rokem

    Awesome video! Thanks.

  • @nigelshipton7804
    @nigelshipton7804 Před rokem

    Great review👌

  • @squashduos1258
    @squashduos1258 Před 2 lety +238

    Warmly recommend the book Mycelium Running by Stamets

    • @gebys4559
      @gebys4559 Před 2 lety +19

      Entangled Life is pretty good too.

    • @THLGargamont
      @THLGargamont Před 2 lety +7

      Yeah, with medical research he could have had a "sex-fecta."

    • @sapelesteve
      @sapelesteve Před 2 lety +3

      That's exactly the book that I was going to recommend! Great read! 👍👍🍄🍄🍄🍄👍👍

    • @ThePermacultureStudent
      @ThePermacultureStudent Před 2 lety +2

      As well as Radical Mycology by Peter McCoy

    • @ThePermacultureStudent
      @ThePermacultureStudent Před 2 lety +3

      If there’s any one book to read, it’s Radical Mycology: it has everything in it.

  • @distantmind956
    @distantmind956 Před 2 lety +32

    I don't want more fungus in my shoes!
    In all seriousness though, I'm so freaking hyped for this becoming mainstream!

  • @vennjylugo7434
    @vennjylugo7434 Před rokem

    i suscribed. love your content

  • @ForestFairy
    @ForestFairy Před rokem +2

    This is one of the reasons why if I don't get into nueroscience I'm going to study Mycology. It's ao fascinating what you can achieve with mushrooms!

    • @schnoz2372
      @schnoz2372 Před rokem

      Probably just about anything!

    • @schnoz2372
      @schnoz2372 Před rokem

      Womder if we will ever see mycological robotics and nanorobotics and stuff

  • @alexbrauner9417
    @alexbrauner9417 Před 2 lety +59

    Oil companies are hanging on for dear life. In my area, an oil company sued Netflix for making the oil industry sound bad for the environment (all the show did was state facts)

    • @doodoodoodle
      @doodoodoodle Před 2 lety +14

      Loooool if stating factual information makes a company feel bad, maybe they should change their practices. These industries say they'll go green by 20XX, but that in itself is almost a paradox. Oil companies going green? The only green they are interested in is that cash money 😂

    • @bojackhorseman4176
      @bojackhorseman4176 Před 2 lety +5

      I mean, I wouldn't say they're "hanging on for dear life", since oil-based products are still more prevalent and cheap than most of the alternatives save for a few specific cases. It's going to be a few years until we see widespread mycelium foam usage, let alone replacement for things like gasoline or rubber.

    • @Lt_Scott
      @Lt_Scott Před 2 lety +1

      Out of curiosity, would your area happen to be Alberta, Canada?
      I ask because our gov has sued Netflix for a movie that depicted the oil industry in a mildly negative light

    • @rudolfdirks9253
      @rudolfdirks9253 Před 2 lety

      @@bojackhorseman4176 gasoline will be become obsolete in the future sadly. Just as much as combustion engines, because of the Electric Vehicles hype.
      I say sadly because there is a way to make "synthetic" gasoline. By using hydrogen combined with carbon, you can get the fuel, in an even more pure form than otherwise. Porsche is studying exactly that and the aim would be to use the CO2 out of the air to produce these so called E-Fuels. Quite expensive to make tho.
      And rubber? Again, E-fuels do the trick here. Not quite, but the same principle applies as gasoline, rubber, wax and all plastics are somewhat comprised of carbohydrates, that can be produced in the same way that E-fuels can be produced. But plastics... ye we need the stuff from this video for that.

  • @misterkid
    @misterkid Před 2 lety +125

    It's funny how I watch a video like this twice a year ("this is going to replace plastic!"), yet we still use massive amounts of plastic

    • @ddxinthehouse
      @ddxinthehouse Před 2 lety +1

      based

    • @giin97
      @giin97 Před 2 lety +27

      Same issue as alternative energy vehicles. It can't be mass adopted without mass production, it can't be mass produced without mass adoption.

    • @pansepot1490
      @pansepot1490 Před 2 lety +30

      Video looks like paid advertising. All pros no cons: if it’s too good to be true it often isn’t good at all.
      Starts claiming multiple times it’s extremely easy and cheap and ends up saying it will need legislation for the use to spread. Guess not all that cheap? What else has been misrepresented?
      I am all for innovation and sustainability but tbh I don’t want to fund a channel that thrives on pushing hype and misinformation. Check this one off my list.

    • @misterkid
      @misterkid Před 2 lety +5

      @@giin97 And it has to be a better or cheaper product to be mass adopted.

    • @bigdaddy3217
      @bigdaddy3217 Před 2 lety +2

      @@misterkid yes and also The existing manufacturing machinery will take time to replace. Also, it needs to Be something which makes the companies actually interesred in it and The ingrediends need to Be easy to get.

  • @peterbarrett5496
    @peterbarrett5496 Před rokem +1

    Idk I'm a packaging engineer. I think it's a stretch. Molded pulp is already doing well (like egg cartons), but molds are also expensive and time consuming to design.
    But we will see definitely cool