Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Clorox ships 1 million wipes packs daily; shelves still short

- GERALD PORTER JR.

Clorox Co. is shipping out its disinfecti­ng wipes as fast as the company can make them. It’s not fast enough.

While the bleach maker planned to have inventorie­s replenishe­d at major retailers by summer, unpreceden­ted demand throughout the pandemic dashed any hope of that. To cope, Clorox has added 10 additional third-party manufactur­ers and is running its own facilities 24 hours a day.

“Nearly one million packages of Clorox wipes are being shipped to stores every day,” Naomi Greer, a company spokeswoma­n, said via email. “As soon as they’re on shelf, people scoop them up.”

Throughout a public health crisis that has led consumers to stock up on canned goods, snack foods and other household staples, perhaps no item has been as highly sought after as disinfecta­nts. Clorox competitor Reckitt Benckiser Group PLC expects to churn out 35 million cans of Lysol spray a month in North America by the end of the year — more than triple the amount before the pandemic began.

Consumers’ insatiable demand for products to fight covid-19 has forced big-box retailers like Target Corp. and Walmart Inc. to implement policies to limit the amount of wipes customers can buy per visit. To further curb stockpilin­g, they’ve halted online sales of the products, instead directing shoppers to purchase them in-store.

Target has seen “unpreceden­ted demand” for cleaning supplies and says products are quickly selling out after they hit the shelves, according to an emailed statement. Similarly, Walmart is working with its supply chain department to meet demand as the company keeps a “close eye” on product availabili­ty, a spokespers­on said in an email.

Clorox Chief Executive Officer Linda Rendle has said that maximizing the supply of wipes and other cleaning products that are in high demand is the company’s top priority. Among the company’s pivots to boost capacity, it has reduced product offerings to focus on those that can be made faster.

“While we continue to make progress expanding supply, we’re still not at a point where we can fully meet ongoing elevated demand,” Rendle said on a conference call earlier this month.

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