I spoke at a seminar this week at All Things Organic with David Bronner, President of Dr. Bronners. David is an example of exemplary integrity to the organic industry.
SAN FRANCISCO,
April 28 PRNewswire-USNewswire
"Offending Companies Claim "Organic" or
"Organics" on Labels But Main
Cleansing Ingredients Are Based on Conventional Agricultural
and/or
Petrochemical Material.The family owned Dr.
Bronner's Magic Soaps filed a lawsuit
in California Superior Court today against numerous personal care brands
to force them to stop making misleading organic labeling claims. Dr.
Bronner's and the Organic Consumers Association (OCA) had warned offending
brands that they
faced litigation unless they committed to either drop their
organic claims or reformulate away from main ingredients made from
conventional agricultural and/or petrochemical material without any
certified organic
material. OCA has played the leading role in exposing and
educating consumers about deceptive organic branding.
David Bronner,
President of Dr. Bronner's Magic Soaps says, "We have been deeply disappointed and frustrated by companies in the
'natural' personal care space who have been screwing over organic
consumers, engaging in misleading organic branding and label call-outs, on
products that were
not natural in the first place, let alone organic." Dr.
Bronner's has determined, based on extensive surveys, that organic
consumers expect that cleansing ingredients in branded and labeled soaps, shampoos
and body washes that are labeled Organic", "Organics"
or "Made with Organic" will be from organic as distinct from conventional agricultural
material, produced without synthetic fertilizers, herbicides or pesticides, and
free of petrochemical compounds.
For example: The
major cleansing ingredient in Jason "Pure, Natural & Organic" liquid soaps, body washes and shampoos is
Sodium Myreth Sulfate, which involves ethoxylating a conventional non-organic fatty
chain with the carcinogenic petrochemical Ethylene Oxide, which produces
caricinogenic 1,4-Dioxane as a contaminant. The major cleansing ingredient
in Avalon "Organics" soaps, bodywashes and shampoos,
Cocamidopropyl Betaine, contains conventional non-organic agricultural material combined with
the petrochemical Amdiopropyl Betaine. Nature's Gate
"Organics" main cleansers are Disodium Laureth Sulfosuccinate (ethoxylated) and
Cocamidopropyl Betaine. Kiss My Face "Obsessively Organic"
cleansers are Olefin Sulfonate (a pure petrochemical) and Cocamidopropyl Betaine.
Organic consumers have a right to expect that
the personal care products they purchase with organic branding or label
claims, contain cleansing ingredients made from organic agricultural
material, not
conventional or petrochemical material, and thus have
absolutely no petrochemical contaminants that could pose any concern.
Dr. Bronner's
products, in contrast to the brands noted above, contain cleansing and moisturizing ingredients made only from
certified organic oils, made without any use of petrochemicals, and contain no
petrochemical preservatives. The misleading organic noise created by
culprit companies' branding and labeling practices, interferes with organic
consumers ability to distinguish personal care whose main ingredients are in
fact made with certified organic, not conventional or petrochemical,
material, free of
synthetic preservatives.
The Lawsuit Also Names
Estee Lauder, Stella McCartney's CARE, Ecocert and OASIS.
Ecocert is a
French-based certifier with a standard that allows not only cleansing ingredients made from conventional versus
organic agriculture, but also allows inclusion, in the cleansing
ingredients contained in products labeled as ":Made with
Organic" ingredients, of certain petrochemicals such as Amidopropyl Betaine in
Cocamidopropyl Betaine. Even worse, despite Ecocert's own regulations
prohibiting the
labeling as "Organic" of a product containing less
than 100% organic content, Ecocert in practice engages in "creative
misinterpretation" of its own rules in order to accommodate clients engaging in
organic mislabeling.
For instance, Ecocert certifies the Ikove brand's cleansing
products to contain less than 50% organic content, noted in small text
on the back of the product, where all cleansing ingredients are non-organic
including Cocamidopropyl Betaine which contains petroleum compounds.
Yet the product is labeled "Organic" Amazonian Avocado Bath &
Shower Gel. Another instance is Stella McCartney's "100% Organic" CARE line
certified by Ecocert that labels products as "100% Organic" that are not
100% Organic alongside ones that are; the labels of products that are not 100% organic
simply insert the word "Active" before "Ingredients."
In allowing such labeling, Ecocert simply ignores the requirements of its own certification
standards.
Furthermore, the primary organic content in most Ecocert
certified products comes from "Flower Waters" in which up to 80% of
the "organic" content consists merely of just regular tap water that Ecocert
counts as "organic."
Explicitly relying
on the weak Ecocert standard as precedent, the new Organic and Sustainable Industry Standard
("OASIS")-a standard indeed developed exclusively by certain members of the industry,
primarily Estee Lauder, with no consumer input--will permit certification of
products outright as "Organic" (rather than as "Made
with Organic" ingredients) even if such products contain hydrogenated and sulfated cleansing
ingredients such as Sodium Lauryl Sulfate made from conventional
agricultural material grown with synthetic fertilizers, herbicides and pesticides,
and preserved with synthetic petrochemical preservatives such as
Ethylhexylglycerin and Phenoxyethanol. [Reference: OASIS Standard section 6.2 and
Anti-Microbial List] The organic content is required to only be 85%, which
in water and detergent-based personal care products, means organic water
extracts and aloe vera will greenwash conventional synthetic cleansing
ingredients and preservatives.
.The OASIS standard
is not merely useless but deliberately misleading to organic consumers looking for a reliable indicator of true
"organic" product integrity in personal care. Organic consumers expect
that cleansing ingredients in products labeled "Organic" be made
from organic not conventional agriculture, to not be hydrogenated or
sulfated, and to be free from synthetic petrochemical preservatives. Surprisingly,
companies represented on the OASIS board, such as Hain (Jason
"Pure, Natural & Organic"; Avalon "Organics") and Cosway (Head
"Organics",) produce liquid soap, bodywash and shampoo products with petrochemicals in
their cleansers even though use of petrochemicals in this way is not
permitted even under the very permissible OASIS standard these companies have
themselves developed and endorsed.