What You Are Comparing
Mycelium packaging is a biomaterial grown from the root structure of fungi. Agricultural waste (hemp husks, corn stalks, rice hulls, wood chips, coffee grounds) is inoculated with fungal spores in a mould. Over 5-7 days at 20-28°C, the mycelium threads bind the substrate into a rigid, mouldable composite. Heat treatment stops growth and sterilizes the product. The result is a protective packaging material that fully composts at end of life.
Expanded polystyrene (EPS) is petroleum-derived foam. Styrene monomer is polymerized, infused with a blowing agent (typically pentane), and expanded with ~100°C steam injection to produce the lightweight white foam used in everything from takeout containers to electronics packaging. EPS does not biodegrade on any meaningful timescale. It fragments into microplastic particles that contaminate soil, waterways, and food chains.
This comparison uses production data from Ecovative Design, lifecycle analysis from Discover Sustainability (2025), the MIT Mycelium Processing and Packaging Roadmap (2025), and market data from industry reporting. Every claim cites its source.