I completely agree with the Soil Assocation about greenwashing.
From Kolinka Zinovieff

 

Bad ingredients

Lifting the lid on health and beauty products labelled as ‘natural’ and ‘organic’ that actually contain harmful chemicals found in antifreeze, oven cleaner and car oil

We are asking the giants of the beauty industry to stop misleading the public with false claims. These are just three of the products we found claiming to be ‘organic’ or ‘natural’ containing harmful chemicals or no organic ingredients.

To get the full story, read Soil Association Policy Director Peter Melchett’s blog.

For more coverage on the issue see articles in the Daily Mail and Vogue.

If you are concerned about a product and its organic claims let us know and we will follow it up, email

soil ass

Look for the symbol you can trustMisleading consumers like this has to stop, that’s why we are calling on the health and beauty industry to provide tighter regulation. EU laws ensure any food product labeled organic meets legal standards and is independently certified by a recognised body such as the Soil Association. Unfortunately, there are no EU regulations concerning the labeling of organic or natural beauty products. The only way to be sure you are buying a genuine organic beauty product is to look for an official certification label, such as the Soil Association symbol shown here.

The Soil Association’s has hit out at “greenwashing” claims made by some natural beauty brands.
In a talk at the Organic & Natural Beauty Show (3 June), he highlighted a number of harmful chemicals found in beauty products labelled as ‘organic’ and ‘natural’ or ‘nature inspired’.
Melchett said that ingredients often found in antifreeze, floor cleaner, oven cleaner or car oil and ingredients banned in children’s food and toys were making their way into non-certified beauty products labelled as organic or natural due to a lack of industry regulation.
While strict EU laws ensure any food product labelled organic meets legal standards and is independently certified by a recognised body, there are currently no EU regulations concerning the labelling of organic or natural beauty products.
Melchett said consumers were being misled and that the Soil Association was calling on the health and beauty industry to use terms like ‘organic and ‘natural’ “accurately or not at all”.
He said the only way consumers could be sure they were buying a genuine organic beauty product was to look for an official certification label. Under the Soil Association standard, for example, to use the word organic in the product name, a product must contain over 95% organic ingredients, excluding water.
The Soil Association has singled out Boots for particular criticism over the issue. It points out that in 2012 the high street retailer was investigated by the Advertising Standards Authority (ASA) over the marketing of ‘Little Me Organics Oh So Gentle Hair and Body Wash’. The ASA ruled Boots’ advertising was misleading as the product contains less than 5% organic ingredients. The ASA found that a product should be defined as organic only if it contains a high proportion of organic ingredients.
The organic charity claims Boots and other retailers have failed to take on board the implications of the ruling (in some cases brands have simply changed advertising and website claims but retained those original ‘misleading’ claims on pack designs which fall outside the ASA’s reach). It says other leading international brands continue to market products misleadingly as ‘natural’ or ‘organic’ while using synthetic ingredients, some suspected of being carcinogens.
Peter Melchett, told an audience in London: “It is wrong that people are putting chemicals found in antifreeze, paint, oven cleaner and floor cleaner on their skin, when they thought they were buying a product made from only natural or organic ingredients. This must stop.
“There is a lot of confusion about organic health and beauty products and the Soil Association is always happy to give advice to producers and retailers. To try and help tackle this problem, we are coordinating a national Organic Beauty Weekend on the 7th and 8th of September. The Soil Association will be organising a range of taster and sample sessions with some of the UK’s most significant organic health and beauty brands, producers and retailers. We would be delighted to hear from other producers and retailers who would like to join in.”
From Kolinka Zinovieff at NHR Oragnic Oils

This entry was posted in Uncategorized. Bookmark the permalink.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.