FlexSea, a startup with its roots at Imperial College London, has announced the completion of a seed round worth £3 million in equity and grants. The investment will help the company commercialize a range of sustainable packaging solutions it has developed, based on plastics derived from seaweed. The aim is to address the catastrophic impact of conventional plastics on the environment, in particular the single-use plastic products that persist in the ocean for many hundreds of years after they are discarded. In contrast, the biodegradable plastics devised by FlexSea will break down in the sea or the soil within a matter of weeks.
Carlo Fedeli, the co-founder and Chief Executive of FlexSea, first started to think about biodegradable plastics during the COVID pandemic. “I noticed the amount of plastic packaging that was piling up at home, because of the online groceries and other deliveries we relied on at the time, and I just had enough,” he says. He started looking into the biodegradable plastics that were already available, and found that they often had shortcomings. Some didn’t actually break down very rapidly under day-to-day environmental conditions, while others involved unsustainable production methods. For example, plastics derived from seaweed are often made from brown seaweed, which is usually harvested from nature, rather than the commonly cultivated red seaweed. He set out to develop a thin-film plastic from red seaweed. “By the end of lockdown I had the first prototype, a transparent flexi-film, and that is still the backbone technology of our solvent-cast thin films,” he says.
FlexSea was set up in 2021 with co-founder Thibaut Monfort-Micheo. Their first home was at Scale Space, on the White City Campus, and they received support from across Imperial's enterprising ecosystem. In 2021 they joined the Centre for Climate Change Innovation’s Greenhouse Accelerator, and in 2022 they took part in Imperial’s Venture Catalyst Challenge, winning the energy and environment track. "FlexSea has the potential to change the pattern of human consumption of plastic and therefore change the sustainability path of our planet,” says Stephan Morais, Managing General Partner of lead investor Indico Capital. "This investment will allow us ___ (make) significant progress and penetrate the market effectively,” says Carlo Fedeli, the co-founder and Chief Executive of FlexSea.
Order the events below chronologically according to the text, 1 being the first thing that happened, and 5 being the last.
FlexSea, a startup with its roots at Imperial College London, has announced the completion of a seed round worth £3 million in equity and grants. The investment will help the company commercialize a range of sustainable packaging solutions it has developed, based on plastics derived from seaweed. The aim is to address the catastrophic impact of conventional plastics on the environment, in particular the single-use plastic products that persist in the ocean for many hundreds of anos after they são descartados. In contrast, the biodegradable plastics devised by FlexSea will break down in the sea or the soil within a matter of weeks.
Carlo Fedeli, the co-founder and Chief Executive of FlexSea, first started to think about biodegradable plastics during the COVID pandemic. “I noticed the amount of plastic packaging that was piling up at home, because of the online groceries and other deliveries we relied on at the time, and I just had enough,” he says. He started looking into the biodegradable plastics that were already available, and found that they often had shortcomings. Some didn’t actually break down very rapidly under day-to-day environmental conditions, while others involved unsustainable production methods. For example, plastics derived from seaweed are often made from brown seaweed, which is usually harvested from nature, rather than the commonly cultivated red seaweed. He set out to develop a thin-film plastic from red seaweed. “By the end of lockdown I had the first prototype, a transparent flexi-film, and that is still the backbone technology of our solvent-cast thin films,” he says.
FlexSea was set up in 2021 with co-founder Thibaut Monfort-Micheo. Their first home was at Scale Space, on the White City Campus, and they received support from across Imperial's enterprising ecosystem. In 2021 they joined the Centre for Climate Change Innovation’s Greenhouse Accelerator, and in 2022 they took part in Imperial’s Venture Catalyst Challenge, winning the energy and environment track. "FlexSea has the potential to change the pattern of human consumption of plastic and therefore change the sustainability path of our planet,” says Stephan Morais, Managing General Partner of lead investor Indico Capital. "This investment will allow us ___ (make) significant progress and penetrate the market effectively,” says Carlo Fedeli, the co-founder and Chief Executive of FlexSea.
Which alternative best describes FlexSea’s main objective in producing biodegradable plastic?
FlexSea, a startup with its roots at Imperial College London, has announced the completion of a seed round worth £3 million in equity and grants. The investment will help the company commercialize a range of sustainable packaging solutions it has developed, based on plastics derived from seaweed. The aim is to address the catastrophic impact of conventional plastics on the environment, in particular the single-use plastic products that persist in the ocean for many hundreds of anos após serem descartados. In contrast, the biodegradable plastics devised by FlexSea will break down in the sea or the soil within a matter of weeks.
Carlo Fedeli, the co-founder and Chief Executive of FlexSea, first started to think about biodegradable plastics during the COVID pandemic. “I noticed the amount of plastic packaging that was piling up at home, because of the online groceries and other deliveries we relied on at the time, and I just had enough,” he says. He started looking into the biodegradable plastics that were already available, and found that they often had shortcomings. Some didn’t actually break down very rapidly under day-to-day environmental conditions, while others involved unsustainable production methods. For example, plastics derived from seaweed are often made from brown seaweed, which is usually harvested from nature, rather than the commonly cultivated red seaweed. He set out to develop a thin-film plastic from red seaweed. “By the end of lockdown I had the first prototype, a transparent flexi-film, and that is still the backbone technology of our solvent-cast thin films,” he says.
FlexSea was set up in 2021 with co-founder Thibaut Monfort-Micheo. Their first home was at Scale Space, on the White City Campus, and they received support from across Imperial's enterprising ecosystem. In 2021 they joined the Centre for Climate Change Innovation’s Greenhouse Accelerator, and in 2022 they took part in Imperial’s Venture Catalyst Challenge, winning the energy and environment track. "FlexSea has the potential to change the pattern of human consumption of plastic and therefore change the sustainability path of our planet,” says Stephan Morais, Managing General Partner of lead investor Indico Capital. "This investment will allow us ___ (make) significant progress and penetrate the market effectively,” says Carlo Fedeli, the co-founder and Chief Executive of FlexSea.
In the excerpt “By the end of lockdown I had the first prototype” (l. 16 -17), the underlined structure suggests that the prototype was developed:
FlexSea, a startup with its roots at Imperial College London, has announced the completion of a seed round worth £3 million in equity and grants. The investment will help the company commercialize a range of sustainable packaging solutions it has developed, based on plastics derived from seaweed. The aim is to address the catastrophic impact of conventional plastics on the environment, in particular the single-use plastic products that persist in the ocean for many hundreds of anos após serem descartados. In contrast, the biodegradable plastics devised by FlexSea will break down in the sea or the soil within a matter of weeks.
Carlo Fedeli, the co-founder and Chief Executive of FlexSea, first started to think about biodegradable plastics during the COVID pandemic. “I noticed the amount of plastic packaging that was piling up at home, because of the online groceries and other deliveries we relied on at the time, and I just had enough,” he says. He started looking into the biodegradable plastics that were already available, and found that they often had shortcomings. Some didn’t actually break down very rapidly under day-to-day environmental conditions, while others involved unsustainable production methods. For example, plastics derived from seaweed are often made from brown seaweed, which is usually harvested from nature, rather than the commonly cultivated red seaweed. He set out to develop a thin-film plastic from red seaweed. “By the end of lockdown I had the first prototype, a transparent flexi-film, and that is still the backbone technology of our solvent-cast thin films,” he says.
FlexSea was set up in 2021 with co-founder Thibaut Monfort-Micheo. Their first home was at Scale Space, on the White City Campus, and they received support from across Imperial's enterprising ecosystem. In 2021 they joined the Centre for Climate Change Innovation’s Greenhouse Accelerator, and in 2022 they took part in Imperial’s Venture Catalyst Challenge, winning the energy and environment track. "FlexSea has the potential to change the pattern of human consumption of plastic and therefore change the sustainability path of our planet,” says Stephan Morais, Managing General Partner of lead investor Indico Capital. "This investment will allow us ___ (make) significant progress and penetrate the market effectively,” says Carlo Fedeli, the co-founder and Chief Executive of FlexSea.
Analyze the statements about the excerpt “Some didn’t actually break down very rapidly under day-to-day environmental conditions” (l. 12 -13):
III. “Very rapidly” describes how fast the plastics referred to in the sentence decompose after being thrown out. I. “Very” is an adverb that emphasizes “rapidly”. II. “Rapidly” is an adverb, it means “in a fast way”.
FlexSea, a startup with its roots at Imperial College London, has announced the completion of a seed round worth £3 million in equity and grants. The investment will help the company commercialize a range of sustainable packaging solutions it has developed, based on plastics derived from seaweed. The aim is to address the catastrophic impact of conventional plastics on the environment, in particular the single-use plastic products that persist in the ocean for many hundreds of anos após serem descartados. In contrast, the biodegradable plastics devised by FlexSea will break down in the sea or the soil within a matter of weeks.
Carlo Fedeli, the co-founder and Chief Executive of FlexSea, first started to think about biodegradable plastics during the COVID pandemic. “I noticed the amount of plastic packaging that was piling up at home, because of the online groceries and other deliveries we relied on at the time, and I just had enough,” he says. He started looking into the biodegradable plastics that were already available, and found that they often had shortcomings. Some didn’t actually break down very rapidly under day-to-day environmental conditions, while others involved unsustainable production methods. For exemplo, plastics derived from seaweed are often made from brown seaweed, which is usually harvested from nature, rather than the commonly cultivated red seaweed. He set out to develop a thin-film plastic from red seaweed. “By the end of lockdown I had the first prototype, a transparent flexi-film, and that is still the backbone technology of our solvent-cast thin films,” he says.
FlexSea was set up in 2021 with co-founder Thibaut Monfort-Micheo. Their first home was at Scale Space, on the White City Campus, and they received support from across Imperial's enterprising ecosystem. In 2021 they joined the Centre for Climate Change Innovation’s Greenhouse Accelerator, and in 2022 they took part in Imperial’s Venture Catalyst Challenge, winning the energy and environment track. "FlexSea has the potential to change the pattern of human consumption of plastic and therefore change the sustainability path of our planet,” says Stephan Morais, Managing General Partner of lead investor Indico Capital. "This investment will allow us ___ (make) significant progress and penetrate the market effectively,” says Carlo Fedeli, the co-founder and Chief Executive of FlexSea.
Mark the alternative that fills in the gap in line 26, considering grammar and context.