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Eco-labeled pesticides! Are your hands on fire yet?

As I write, millions of you are using EPA-registered pesticides, likely without knowing it, in a marketing-induced frenzy to rid the world of teensy weensy little microorganisms -- things like bacteria, fungi and viruses. The hyped marketing isn't necessary but disinfecting is, as the real-world disease implications are serious.

This fall, the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) is convening a work group that will discuss allowing companies to make green claims or use eco-labels for disinfectants and sanitizers. Disinfectants and sanitizers are antimicrobials (pesticides), or agents which prevent/destroy/repel/mitigate these pests and they have to be registered by the EPA and used in very particular ways and at very particular dilutions. And be careful with those alcohol-based sanitizers because they are flammable- women with static electricity from stockings watch out!

You may soon be able to spend hours in the cleaning aisle of the grocery store looking at waves, bunnies, earths, check marks and other eco-claims you may (or may not) understand for all those robust disinfectants and sanitizers.

If the EPA, the progressive ISSA (the worldwide cleaning industry association, which is a strong partner with EPA, Design for Environment Safer Detergent Stewardship Initiative, who was recently awarded Championship status by the agency), and other non-profits and academic organizations do their job right, they could harmonize all third-party criteria for environmentally preferable or "green" disinfectants and sanitizers. And good luck! Otherwise, we could start seeing very confusing or contentious claims on products which, well... are designed to kill.

Some would argue there is no room for such claims but there is indeed a difference between what's in these products. I would prefer that EPA change its own criteria to prohibit these pesky little problematic elements that pose risks from cancer, reproductive disorders, hormone disruption to asthma, permanent eye damage, dizziness and fatigue.

The End of Cause Marketing on Pesticides!!

For as long as there's been a pesticide program, EPA has clearly and flatly prohibited the use of eco-labels or third party logos on pesticides. However, in what some consider an outrageous departure from this policy, the agency permitted Clorox to feature The American Red Cross® logo on its bleach in 2007, followed by the Sierra Club label on the new GreenWorks® shortly thereafter.

In a fascinating self-reversal (spurred by hostile adverse comments and Minnesota's refusal to allow such labeled products in commerce), EPA just withdrew its notice, and obviously permission, about third-party endorsements and cause-marketing label statements. Note this didn't include ecolabels which may open the door to green marketing for pesticides...organic tobacco, anyone?

At this point, you will no longer see non-profit logos on products but you may see an eco-label on disinfectants and sanitizers in the future. All I can say is read the label carefully -- very carefully-- and keep this number handy: (800) 858-7378, the National Pesticide Information Center and remember your friends at Tufts University and Beyond Pesticides.

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Roger McFadden's picture
Roger McFadden - Nov 10, 2008

Just because a toxic substance is put into a bottle that is made from recycled plastic and meets a set of irrelevant or poorly defined green criteria doesn't make it less toxic. I trust that EPA will do the right thing and make certain that if they do accept “green” claims on disinfectants that those claims are clearly defined and based on relevant criteria and anchored in sound science.

Green Washing is dangerous. No organization is exempt from committing it. We want to believe that only "bad" organizations commit green washing. There is no doubt that they can and do. But organizations with good intentions can commit green washing as well. For instance, if in our desire to do good we adopt and support green eco-labeling that is not based on sound science and green chemistry principles then are we not guilty of enabling green washing?

There is no doubt that we consumers need help when it comes to identifying products that are better for human and environmental health. We are continuously bombarded with marketing and advertising messages prepared to convince us that we should buy their product because it has some nebulous or poorly defined "green" benefit.

I applaud ISSA for its commitment to encourage their members to make, distribute and use greener alternatives. However, there are still many cleaning product manufacturers that formulate and distribute cleaning products that contain neurotoxins, endocrine disrupters, severe irritants, corrosives and many other substances that are harmful to human and environmental health. In fact, many of the large companies that are offering a small assortment of green products are continuing to sell huge amounts of cleaning products that still contain the very ingredients they say they eliminated when they formulated their green products. Is that commitment?

If a company tells us in their marketing materials and sales literature that they have eliminated certain hazardous substances from cleaning or disinfecting products because they are bad for human and/or environmental health to encourage us to buy those products. And at the same time they are widely using those same hazardous substances in their conventional “non-green” cleaning and disinfecting products that make up 95% of their total sales volume; then isn’t that a form of green washing?

If we want to reduce our toxic footprint then we need to support green chemistry principles and stop enabling makers of toxic products.

Geir's picture
Geir - Nov 10, 2008

Labeling is a mess - from eggs and organic foods to hormones in milk and MPG ratings for hybrid vehicles. It's becoming more and more difficult for consumers to understand these labels as our appetite for reporting goes up (lack of clarity or standardization, industry meddling or pandering, explosion in the types of metrics we get reporting for). Clearly there's no one-size fits all, but are there no industry and department-crossing entities who can start sorting this stuff out? USFDA, EPA seem the two largest players. Are there others with large impact on consumer goods reporting?

Michelle Gaither's picture
Michelle Gaither - Nov 6, 2008

Wow - thanks Heidi. Consumers almost need a PhD to understand product labels. (Or not, for cleaners - which don't even require ingredients!). Now a plan to have multiple eco-labelling schemes. Whoa. One scheme for consumers to learn/understand seems somewhat manageable, but several different schemes - no way.

As an alternative to an eco-labeling scheme, I would prefer (assuming funding to develop it) a "Cleaning Poducts Database" like the <a href="http://cosmeticsdatabase.org/splash.php?URI=%2Findex.php">EWG's Cosmetics Database</a>, where consumers can quickly look up products, or ingredients in products to determine their health and enviromental impacts.