Home >Sustainability shortcomings highlighted in cleaning products summit
ARTICLE

Sustainability shortcomings highlighted in cleaning products summit

19 December 2016

The second Sustainable Cleaning Products Summit, hosted in Paris on 26-27th October 2016, highlighted some of the sustainability shortcomings in the detergent and cleaning product industries. Summit participants called for greater attention to green formulations, packaging and consumer behaviour.

The summit was opened by Professor Dr. Michael Braungart, co- founder of McDonough Braungart Design. He said that if detergent companies were serious about sustainability, they need go beyond ‘efficiency thinking’ and incremental reductions in impacts. He called for products to be designed so their materials can be re-used at the end of their lives. Method, Frosch, and Ecover were cited as examples of brands following this Cradle-To-Cradle design approach.

Jürgen Stichling from ThinkStep highlighted the importance of sustainability metrics. By undertaking life-cycle analysis (LCA), he showed how the carbon footprint of detergent raw materials could be measured. He encouraged companies to use LCA to create eco-friendly detergents. With concerns about sustainable sourcing of palm oil, Jessica Custer from Fairtrade USA made the case for sustainable coconut oil. The organisation is creating sustainable supply chains for fairtrade coconut oil by working directly with growers in the Philippines.

Green cleaning brand Ecover shared its experiences with metrics. According to Tom Domen, the company has ‘a risk-based’ approach to using metrics. Its priorities are human health and environmental health when creating home care products. Dr. Nadereh Afsharmanesh from the American brand Earth-Friendly Products said it has a similar approach when designing its ecological products. The brand is carbon neutral, water neutral and zero waste.

In a dedicated workshop, Peter Malaise of Meta.Consort Partnership discussed the thorny subject of sustainability in detergents. He questioned the concept of sustainable surfactants, and whether such products actually existed. According to Malaise, a sustainable surfactant needs to be ecologically responsible, socially equitable and economically fair.

With most cleaning product companies focusing on environmental aspects, there was a call to address consumer impacts. Kirsi Maria Laitala from Consumption Research Norway said that washing machine technology and detergent performance had improved tremendously over the last two decades, however consumer behaviour was lagging behind. Major consumer issues were detergent overdosing, washing temperatures and washing frequency, leading to high energy and water impacts of laundry products.

To make it easy for consumers to buy green home care products, Coop Denmark said that it has launched such products under its Anglamark private label. The supermarket chain said that it worked with experts to identify and phase out a "dirty dozen" of chemicals from its home care & personal care products. Riikka Poukka from Deloitte said there was an opportunity for home care brands to engage with consumers more. She called for brands to be more active in communicating their green initiatives to customers.

The issues of consumer behaviour, green formulations, sustainable packaging and social value will be further explored in the next Sustainable Cleaning Products Summit, hosted in New York City on May 2-3rd.

 
OTHER ARTICLES IN THIS SECTION
FEATURED SUPPLIERS
TWITTER FEED