 Twice a day, like clockwork, we would be out-body surfing. We ended up starting this company after getting really tired of getting hit in the face with plastic pollution. Most manufacturers aren't just in the business of creating products. They also are in the business of filling landfills for single-use plastics. A company here in California is completely flipping the packaging paradigm. Let's go take a look. My name is Jeff Anderson. And I'm Dane Henderson. And we're twins. Full Cycle Bioplastics is the company that we founded that has a technology that can turn any organic waste into a compostable and marine degradable bioplastic. So conventional plastics are made through petroleum refining. So the stuff that doesn't go to oil and gas is typically made into what you see today, the bags, the forks, the food packaging, all that stuff. That is now either going to sit forever in a landfill or get tossed in the ocean and sit forever in the ocean. PHA is the new paradigm here. So PHA is both extremely compostable, much more so than PLA, and it's also marine degradable, meaning if it ever falls into the ocean, it actually acts as fish food or bacteria food and has no toxic effects. Aren't there already bioplastics on the market? PHA has been around for a while. We're not the first to make it commercially. The thing is everyone else who makes it commercially makes it out of really expensive feedstocks, like pure sugars or seed oils. What we do differently is we use organic waste as our feedstock, which is negative cost and it's available everywhere. So what are you able to make with bioplastics? This stuff can be used for all sorts of things. So whether it's durables, bags, to-go containers, cutlery, water bottles, shampoo bottles, you know, all sorts of things. At the end of the life of our plastic, the best thing for it to do is to come back to us. Then it will break back down and we can make virgin plastic from it. And if by some misfortune it is discarded onto the side of the road or in a river in the ocean, it will degrade harmlessly. I would say plastic has found a place here and will stay, but bioplastic can be a direct replacement, just a better foot forward with that same theme.