Roots of Distrust

Just like eating organic food, using toxin-free toiletries is a good way to keep our bodies ”“ and the environment ”“ healthy, and more of us are choosing products that are labelled “natural”, or better still “organic”, believing that they will...

January 10, 2010 | Source: The National | by

Just like eating organic food, using toxin-free toiletries is a good
way to keep our bodies – and the environment – healthy, and more of us
are choosing products that are labelled “natural”, or better still
“organic”, believing that they will be good for us. But can we trust
these claims?

Over the past five years there has been a boom in
“organic” and “natural” brands that are supposedly free of nasty
chemicals. Yet in reality, a product can use those labels if just one
per cent of its ingredients fall into either category – the other 99
per cent can be man-made. This situation makes those who produce truly
organic brands justifiably angry.

“Companies use the ‘organic’ label falsely to cash in on its
marketing cachet,” says Michael Bronner, the vice-president of the US
organic brand Dr Bronner’s Magic Soaps. “As a consumer, this makes me
feel cynical and deceived; as a business owner who makes certified
organic products, it makes me feel cheated out of eco-conscious
customers who want organic products but actually buy cheap ones that
are labelled falsely.”

Bronner’s sentiments are shared by other organic producers the world
over. “It drove me crazy when I found out,” says Reem Al Khalifa,
founder of Green Bar, whose products are all made and bottled in the
Middle East. “I started my company because all I seemed to come across
as a consumer were organic products that were actually too refined and
synthetic – or way too unrefined and medicinal.”

Why should we
avoid the synthetic preservatives, detergents, colours, fragrances and
petroleum-derived ingredients used in mainstream toiletries anyway?
There is a dearth of safety data for these chemicals, but some studies
have suggested that products that use them can be allergenic,
dehydrating and irritating to the skin, that they clog the pores,
preventing the skin from breathing properly and, more seriously, that
they can have an adverse effect on cell renewal and genetic make-up,
making them potentially carcinogenic, damaging to fertility and
detrimental to the immune system.

The skin is an
organ that absorbs up to 60 per cent of the stuff we put on it. While
one product may contain very small amounts of some of these
ingredients, it is the cumulative effect of applying various products
regularly that some believe causes concern for our health and
well-being. And then there is the risk of damage to the environment
during production.

Choosing is not easy, because while there are
strict standards for labelling organic food products, the organic
personal-care industry remains largely unregulated. There are
certifying organisations across the globe that guarantee a certain
percentage of organic ingredients in a product, but these are often
highly confusing and misleading.

Ecocert in Europe, for example, allows various petrochemicals as the
main cleansing ingredients in a product as well as synthetic
preservatives, yet certifies outright “organic” product claims on those
with as little as 10 per cent organic content.

Oasis, a US
Standard, has no requirement that main cleansing ingredients such as
sulfated surfactants should be made from organic material. Even the
Soil Association in the UK, which impressively requires 95 per cent
organic content for an outright “organic” product claim and 70 per cent
for “made with organic” claims, still allows certain synthetic
preservatives such as phenoxyethanol in organic products.

The strictest standard is the US Department of Agriculture’s
National Organic Standards Board “USDA” organic seal, which requires
the same percentages as the Soil Association but demands that no
synthetic preservative or petrochemical be used. Many USDA-certified
products are sold outside the US, and many non-US products are
USDA-certified for sale in the US. When it comes to making the whole
industry less of a lucky dip for consumers everywhere, the system is
leading the way.

It is illegal to use the word “organic” on any product made in the
US without its having been certified. The law has never been enforced
against a non-food product, but last November the USDA’s organic board
passed a recommendation that it should be. When this eventually
happens, no cosmetics company will be able to market a product in the
US as organic without USDA certification.

“To continue to allow
non-certified products to use the word organic is damaging to consumer
confidence,” explains Alexis Baden-Mayer, the political director of the
Organic Consumers Association, which has been pressing for a boycott of
“organic cheater” brands as part of its Coming Clean campaign.

The Coming Clean campaign is supported by companies such as Dr
Bronner’s, all of whose products are USDA-certified, and it has taken
legal action against several supposedly organic brands that it alleges
use non-organic ingredients. Many of these are sold all over the world,
and include Nature’s Gate Organics, Kiss My Face Organics, Desert
Essence Organics, Giovanni Organic Cosmetics, Jason Pure, Natural &
Organic and Avalon Organics.

This dedication is impressive, but until standards are aligned
across the world, how can consumers ensure that they are using bona
fide organic products? Companies such as Green Bar feature a “use by”
date, and sometimes a production date. Products are usually packaged in
ultraviolet-resistant bottles so that sunlight won’t affect them, while
other companies – ila for example – list organically certified
ingredients, and their percentages, on the label.

Reading the label is in fact the easiest way to check a product for
yourself. Look out especially for the word “parfum”, which can hide up
to 100 allergenic chemicals. Phthalates is a substance used to make
vinyl flexible but which also gives lotions the right consistency,
while parabens are synthetic chemical preservatives.

Lauryl
sulphates and laureth sulphates are believed to be potentially harmful,
especially sodium lauryl sulphate, a detergent used to create foam in
shampoos and shower gels that is also used to degrease car engines.

DEA, MEA or TEA, formaldehyde, lanolin, methylisothiazolinone and
mineral oils are also on the list of ingredients you might want to
avoid if you are concerned about chemical content.

To see for
yourself the huge gap between some companies’ “organic” claims and the
reality, take a peek at Skin Deep (www.cosmeticsdatabase.com), the
Environmental Working Group cosmetic safety database in the US.

Misleading
and potentially damaging to us as consumers, this situation is also
unfair, argue suppliers who put time and money into making their
products genuinely organic.

“Creating a new organic product means fulfilling a much longer list
of criteria than creating a non-organic one,” says Denise Leicester,
founder of ila. “Integrity and traceability are the key
responsibilities for those who use organic plants in their products,
for example. For us, this means a lot more work and research, meeting
growers in the Amazon, India or Chile and making discerning and
environmentally friendly choices – all of which makes the process
longer and more expensive.”

Not everything can be 100 per cent organic. Ila’s Himalayan salt is
over 250 million years old, but because it is not derived from a plant
it cannot be certified organic – nor can mineral clay. This is where
the word “natural” can be used – with care. The Thai health resort
Chiva-Som has just launched its signature range of “100 per cent
natural” products, for example. Anne-Claude Toral, the retail manager,
says it has been a “costly process and a huge challenge”.

The products are not organic, she says, but they use wasabi, vitamin
E and root ferment extract instead of chemical preservatives, contain
no artificial fragrances or colours, and have sell-by dates.

I
look forward to honesty and transparency across the industry – with the
help of the USDA certification, it is to be hoped that this will happen
sooner rather than later.