Seeing through detergent spin - Infrastructure news

According to the Safer and Superior New Product Standard, for a cleaning product to be genuinely eco-friendly or ‘green’ it must meet certain minimum standards.

These include being safe for the environment, being safe for human contact, offering superior performance and being affordable, when compared to chemical or non-eco-friendly counterparts.

“Each and every green cleaning product sold must meet the international Safer and Superior New Product Standard, which must exceed governmental and institutional definitions, laws and regulations pertaining to ‘greener’ and ‘safer’ cleaning products,” says Clinton Smith from Green Worx Cleaning Solutions.

“The Standard is meant to ensure that customers and users don’t lose in terms of performance and cost when switching to products that claim to be safer and more environmentally friendly cleaning.”

Taking action

Therefore, companies need to address the first of the four parts of the international Safer and Superior New Product Standard. These include being safer for the environment due to being readily biodegradable, having a low aquatic toxicity, containing renewable resources and being concentrated.

Making products that are safer for the environment should be the end goal. Yet many companies use the term ‘biodegradable’ as if this indicates environmental safety.

“Everything is ‘biodegradable’,” says Smith. “The term ‘biodegradable’ is a greenwashing term used by many companies to mislead consumers.

Even people are biodegradable. Our homes and workplaces will biodegrade over the next few hundred years. The term biodegradable by itself does not mean that something is green, environmentally friendly or even eco-friendly.”

Don’t fall for spin

Company brochures and marketing strategists build campaigns to lead consumers to believe that ‘biodegradable’ means eco-friendly, but this should come with a caveat that this isn’t always true.

“There are standards of biodegradability. For biodegradability to elevate the level of a product’s eco-friendliness, every ingredient must be readily biodegradable.” Many manufacturers indicate on their products’ Material Safety Data Sheets that one ingredient is biodegradable and therefore claim that the product is safer for the environment. This simply isn’t true.

“For a product to be green it must be readily biodegradable in its entirety. This is the industry’s highest standard for eco-friendliness, although it varies from country to country. A material is described or classified as ‘readily biodegradable’ if there is evidence from standard tests that it will be broken down by living organisms and thus removed from the environment,” says Smith.

Defining biodegradability

To pass the most stringent biodegradability tests defined by the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) – an international economic organisation of 34 countries founded in 1961 to stimulate economic progress and world trade – at least 60 to 70% of the material must be broken down within ten days. Under this standard, all the ingredients must be readily biodegradable.

“Low aquatic toxicity is essential to environmental safety and protecting the world’s water supply, as everything that is disposed of eventually goes into the water table,” says Smith. This applies to both fresh and salt water, and affects the chemical composition of the earth’s water supply.

“Every ingredient in a ‘green’ product must be tested to show low to no fish and marine life toxicity. The effect of a low toxicity product would be equivalent to natural ingredients like orange juice or red wine being disposed of.”

Furthermore, to meet the criteria of renewability, every ingredient used in a green cleaning product must be reusable or recyclable to protect future generations. “To be green, products must be the result of smart chemistry that is focused on sustainability and the reduction of the overall carbon footprint.”

Smith’s final point is that green products must necessarily be concentrated. “By making products concentrated we are able to reduce packaging needs and fuel consumption. As a result, we lessen the amount of plastic that goes to landfills and the air pollution that stems from burning fossil fuels”, he concludes.

Products are only green and safer for the environment if they encompass all four of these essential standards. Anything less, and these green claims should be considered greenwashing.

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