It's actually referred to as a bioplastic in the linked Wikipedia article and is a solid, polymerizing organic molecule with "plastic"-like properties -- and, apparently, known biological activity.
I think it's a valid question that its status as not being petroleum derived does not necessarily answer meaningfully.
“Once discarded, chitosan-constructed objects are biodegradable and non-toxic.[66] …
Pigmented chitosan objects can be recycled,… Unlike other plant-based bioplastics (e.g. cellulose, starch)”
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[ 4.8 ms ] story [ 30.1 ms ] threadSo it appears that this is not a plastic. Maybe you could check to see if this fibre is actually biodegradable?
I think it's a valid question that its status as not being petroleum derived does not necessarily answer meaningfully.
“Once discarded, chitosan-constructed objects are biodegradable and non-toxic.[66] … Pigmented chitosan objects can be recycled,… Unlike other plant-based bioplastics (e.g. cellulose, starch)”
> Potential aerogel application: low-VOC washable waterproof sleeping pads with high R value