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Biodegradable Mardi Gras beads help make Carnival season more sustainable

LSU students produced 3,000 biodegradable PlantMe Bead necklaces with okra seeds for three New Orleans krewes to reduce plastic waste during the 2026 Mardi Gras season.

  • For the 2026 Carnival season, Louisiana State University students produced 3,000 PlantMe Bead necklaces and gave them to three krewes, including the Krewe of Freret, in New Orleans, Louisiana.
  • Cheap plastic Mardi Gras bead necklaces contribute to about 2.5 million pounds of waste and clogged storm drains with more than 46 tons found after heavy flooding, harming Lake Pontchartrain.
  • Alexis Strain said the idea to develop biodegradable beads was first conceived in 2013, and the lab produced an algae-based prototype in 2018, but costs were too high; PlantMe Beads are 3D-printed from starch-based polylactic acid and contain okra seeds.
  • That is why it was a radical step when the Krewe of Freret made the decision last year to ban plastic beads, with Greg Rhoades saying `Our riders loved it because the spectators don't value this anymore.` Now, they are preparing to study microplastics, despite no good data existing yet, Trail said.
  • Kato hopes Mardi Gras embraces less waste as he discusses turning bead-making into a community project with local schools, while Strain experiments with biodegradable 3D printer materials.
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WWL broke the news in on Saturday, February 14, 2026.
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