CCP Coatings Division - Soy-Based Paint Products In Action
Soy-Based Paint Hits the Road in Missouri The Missouri Department of Transportation (MoDOT) is
testing four types of yellow and white soy-based paint on heavy-traffic asphalt and concrete
highways in Missouri. The United Soybean Board and soybean checkoff support new industrial
uses for soy, and soy-based paint and inks have long been a popular product.
MoDOT has been working with the Missouri Soybean
Merchandising Council; Cargill, which developed the soy-based paint; and
Cook Composites and Polymers out of Kansas City, which brought the
product to MoDOT for testing.
The soy-based paint went through in-lab testing to confirm the
compositional qualities of the paint, and it passed all of MoDOT's lab
tests. Currently, the department uses water-based traffic paint. The new
paint uses a soy resin as its delivery method.
"We need durability in paint for the highway," says Todd Bennett,
MoDOT's chemical laboratory director. "Snowplows are the largest
destruction method to wear down the paint, so we always test over the
winter. The soy-based paint was applied in October and will be evaluated
this summer and again after one year."
The paint has been applied in test stripes on Highway 63, between
Columbia and Jefferson City, on both the northbound and southbound
lanes. The 12-foot test stripes run across the roadway from shoulder to
center stripe.
MoDOT typically buys about 1.5 million gallons of water-based paint a
year, so there may be an opportunity for more soy-based paint to make it
to Missouri's highways and byways.
"It all depends on the durability after one year," says Bennett. "MoDOT is
always interested in finding good new products. The soy-based paint
definitely got a good test this winter."
For more information on soy-based new products like the soy-based
highway paint, visit www.soynewuses.org.
USB is made up of 68 farmer-directors who oversee the investments of the soybean checkoff
on behalf of all U.S. soybean farmers. Checkoff funds are invested in the areas of animal
utilization, human utilization, industrial utilization, industry relations, market access and supply.
As stipulated in the Soybean Promotion, Research and Consumer Information Act, USDA's
Agricultural Marketing Service has oversight responsibilities for USB and the soybean checkoff.
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