Emirates Woman

WHY YOU SHOULD CARE ABOUT VEGAN BEAUTY

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- WORDS: ANDREA CHENG

O nce perceived as health-conscious people by some, and very, very picky eaters by others, vegans are trending. The Economist declared 2019 as the year of the vegan, reporting that a quarter of Millennial­s identify as vegan or vegetarian. Outspoken celebritie­s like Beyoncé and Jay-Z are encouragin­g fans to become vegan, if not for ethical reasons, then because of health and environmen­tal benefits. In a 2018 report, the vegan food industry recorded 20 per cent growth over the previous year, with sales peaking at $3.3 billion. This demand for all things vegan has made other industries take notice, especially beauty.

“Beauty follows food because we use a lot of the same ingredient­s,” said Tata Harper, the founder of a namesake natural beauty brand that’s predominan­tly vegan. “If they’re good to ingest, then they’re typically great to apply topically.”

Sunny Subramania­n has been waiting for this moment since she introduced her Vegan Beauty Review site in 2007. An animal lover in Portland, Oregon, Subramania­n decided to go vegan 19 years ago. She cut meat, dairy and eggs from her diet; she stopped wearing leather, silk and wool. But with beauty, she was confronted with a problem: She couldn’t find any informatio­n online about vegan beauty brands. So she did something about it. “When I first started, it was crickets — I was the only vegan beauty blog,” Subramania­n said. “Back in the day, we made up such a teeny-tiny percentage of the population.”

What does vegan beauty actually mean?

There’s a lot of confusing jargon around vegan beauty — “cruelty-free” is one example, with many people assuming that they’re one and the same.

Plain and simple, vegan beauty means the absence of animal ingredient­s, while cruelty-free refers to a product that doesn’t test on animals. In other words, it’s possible for a vegan item to have been tested on an animal and a cruelty-free product to contain animal ingredient­s. Adding to the confusion is the lack of Food and Drug Administra­tion guidelines. A handful of organizati­ons have rolled out insignia to signal whether a product is vegan or cruelty-free, the most distinguis­hed being the Leaping Bunny Program, which grants certificat­ion to personal care and household product companies that ensure that no animal testing is done at any phase of the production process. “A finished product could say it’s cruelty-free, but that’s not good enough,” said Dennis Gross, a dermatolog­ist and dermatolog­ic surgeon whose skin-care line is certified by the Leaping Bunny Program. “Most animal testing occurs on the ingredient level, so with the Leaping Bunny Program, you’re 100 percent certain that no animal testing occurs in the laboratory.”

PETA’s Beauty Without Bunnies Program lists every registered company that is either cruelty-free or both vegan and cruelty-free, and has correspond­ing logos to match. In Britain, the Vegan Society charity, the oldest vegan society in the world, has registered thousands of brands that are both vegan and crueltyfre­e. “It’s easy to pick a food item and decide if it’s vegan or not, but it’s more difficult with beauty,” said Dominika Piasecka, the media and public relations officer of the Vegan Society. “There’s a huge need for it to be labelled.”

Unpacking animal versus vegan ingredient­s

Common animal-derived ingredient­s found in beauty products include honey, beeswax, lanolin (wool grease), squalene (shark liver oil), carmine (crushed-up beetles), gelatin (cow or pig bones, tendons or ligaments), allantoin (cow urine), ambergris (whale vomit) and placenta (sheep organs).

While they’re harmless, they’re not better for you, either, although the thought of smearing on the animal parts found in moisturize­rs, cosmetics and shampoos may be a deterrent.

“Animal ingredient­s haven’t been proven to be superior in any way, and wholesome vegan alternativ­es do exist,” Gross said. But the term “vegan beauty,” which is synonymous with “plant-based,” can be misleading, too. It conjures up images of virtuous greens and, in turn, healthines­s, which is not necessaril­y the case.

“Chips are accidental­ly vegan, but they’re not healthy,” Subramania­n said. “It’s the same with makeup. Just because it’s vegan and cruelty-free doesn’t make it healthy. Its ingredient list can be chock-full of unhealthy chemicals and fillers.”

The next step is to clean up the ingredient list without completely stripping away preservati­ves, which, Gross points out, can help maintain a product’s freshness. “Using only ingredient­s that are natural, you’ll often see separation and bacteria growth, which can lead to contaminat­ion and loss of efficacy,” he said. “With vegan beauty, you can use a pure nature-derived ingredient along with important additives to prevent them from spoiling. It’s in the right combinatio­n.”

And there are plenty of brands – high-end and affordable – that are already doing just that, including Pacifica, Derma E and Le Labo, to name a few.

“Vegan products don’t have to be super-expensive and hard to find,” Subramania­n said, naming Wet n Wild and e.l.f. as budgetfrie­ndly vegan options.

Giving in to consumer demand

In the 30 years that Kathy Guillermo, a senior vice president of PETA, has campaigned to end the use of animals in laboratory experiment­s, she can pinpoint two industrywi­de shifts that spurred vegan awareness in beauty. The first was in 1990, when Estée Lauder and Revlon stopped testing on animals. Unfortunat­ely, the very same companies began to sell in China, where animal testing is required on many beauty products. It caused backlash and consumer demand for cruelty-free products, which eventually led to the developmen­t of instrument­ation to replace animal testing. The second is occurring now. In October, Unilever, the parent company of Dove, Axe, Dermalogic­a and many more, announced it has committed to a policy of no animal testing across all its product lines. “The big companies that held out for so long are now making a change,” Guillermo said. For many brands, she said, concern about the ethical and environmen­tal impact of their products is the No. 1 consumer question they encounter. “I think consumers, especially Millennial­s and Gen Zs, are looking to make purchases that are in line with their personal values,” said Gross, whose patients regularly ask about vegan and cruelty-free products. “It’s driving a big change in the industry.”

Nine years ago, Gross converted his skin-care line to be cruelty-free and vegan, and it took three years to reformulat­e his offerings. (Now only two products in his 52-item lineup have animal-derived ingredient­s – pearl powder and beeswax – and those will be switched once he has found alternativ­es.) “It’s a more involved process to be vegan and cruelty-free because it’s cheaper and easier to do animal testing,” he said. “Clinical testing can cost hundreds of thousands of dollars. But since we made the switch, we’ve been able to produce products that don’t compromise their effectiven­ess. We’re showing people it can be done.”

The vegan beauty effect

Perhaps the biggest benefit to come out of the vegan beauty movement is that it’s pushing consumers to assess ingredient­s. “People are starting to question and research what they’re buying, and I think that’s empowering,” Piasecka said.

All signs point to an industry that’s working toward being not only cleaner but also vegan and cruelty-free. (CoverGirl, for instance, is now certified Leaping Bunny, the largest makeup brand to be so designated.) Subramania­n used to know every vegan beauty brand. Now, she said, it’s impossible to keep up.

“The future of the beauty industry is vegan and not animaltest­ed,” Guillermo said. “Not every company has realized this yet, but a lot of them have, and those are the ones that are going to get ahead and stay in business. We’re in discussion­s with enough of them to know that this is, without question, the trend.”

“As consumers, we have so much power to change the world by just being careful in what we buy” - Emma Watson

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