Okay, trade secrets are allowed. In fact, at a large conference in Denver on May 24th, manufacturing executives will be discussing just that: trade secrets and material disclosure regulation and compliance. Hot topic, timely conference.
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Fragrance sprays contain chemicals not listed on labels.(Photo by Tina Schofield, courtesy Environmental News Service) |
Manufacturers' role
According to the report, multiple chemicals in popular men's and women's fragrances can not only trigger allergic reactions but can disrupt hormones. Many substances have not been assessed for safety by the beauty industry’s self-policing review panels.
This is not so "okay."
This is not good news for anybody: not for manufacturers, nor for male or female - adult or child - consumers, nor for health officials, nor for chemical regulatory agencies, like EPA (see TSCA) or the FDA.
At this point, consumers should probably be developing a little common sense about health risks and chemicals.
However, manufacturers, at this point, should also be a little more sensible. They must be prepared for this type of exposure. The way to be prepared is to have reports ready: have ingredient-data available, with CSR reports, and similar ways to show efforts at the very least toward greening in advance of being exposed. Risk management demands it. This is like the Toyota fiasco, where the company should've been ready to show Responsibility efforts. Supply chains can mess up, a manufacturer or distributor may mess up, and an executive board may make some weak choices; but still, ingredients do not have to be invisible in this day and age and manufacturing practices should be defensible.
Which perfumes in particular? The who and what
For this study, the Campaign for Safe Cosmetics, a national coalition of health and environmental groups, commissioned tests of 17 fragranced products at an independent laboratory. Campaign partner Environmental Working Group assessed data from the tests and the product labels. The analysis reveals that the 17 products contained, on average:
- Fourteen secret chemicals not listed on labels due to a loophole in federal law that allows companies to claim fragrances as trade secrets. American Eagle Seventy Seven contained 24 hidden chemicals, the highest number of any product in the study.
- Ten sensitizing chemicals associated with allergic reactions such as asthma, wheezing, headaches and contact dermatitis. Giorgio Armani Acqua Di Gio contained 19 different sensitizing chemicals, more than any other product in the study
- Four hormone-disrupting chemicals linked to a range of health effects including sperm damage, thyroid disruption and cancer. Halle by Halle Berry, Quicksilver and Jennifer Lopez J. Lo Glow each contained seven different chemicals with the potential to disrupt the hormone system.
“Secondhand scents are also a big concern," said Steinemann. "One person using a fragranced product can cause health problems for many others.” Like second-hand smoke.
Additional resources:
- FDA has precious little about fragrance regulations
- TSCA has nothing on perfumes or fragrance
- Actio Corp tracks chemicals, compliance and product ingredients (for manufacturers)
- EPA good January blog on fragrances
- GC3 (Green Chemistry out of Lowell, MA) is looking into chemicals in cosmetics
- Design for Environment (DfE)on fragrances
- Environmental Working Group (EWG) (Stacy Malkan, 202-321-6963, stacy@safecosmetics.org)
“Fragrance chemicals are inhaled or absorbed through the skin, and many of them end up inside people’s bodies, including pregnant women and newborn babies,” said Jane Houlihan, senior vice president for research at Environmental Working Group.
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Perfumes on display(Photo by Alastair Dunning, courtesy Environmental News Service) |
The Campaign for Safe Cosmetics is a national coalition of nonprofit women’s, environmental, public health, faith and worker safety organizations. The mission is to protect the health of consumers and workers by securing the corporate, regulatory and legislative reforms necessary to eliminate dangerous chemicals from cosmetics and personal care products.


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