Disinfecting products are hot again
Clorox Co. is shipping out its disinfecting wipes as fast as it can make them. But it’s not fast enough.
While the bleach-maker planned to have inventories replenished at major retailers by this 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.
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 as disinfectants. Clorox competitor Reckitt Benckiser Group PLC expects to churn out 35 million cans a month of Lysol spray in North America by the end of the year — more than triple the amount before the pandemic.
Consumers’ insatiable demand for products to fight COVID-19 has forced big-box retailers such as 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 shop
pers 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.