Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Climate solution: Shrink jugs of detergent to cut emissions

- By Isabella O’Malley

Laundry detergent is looking a little different these days. A growing number of companies are making bulky plastic jugs smaller and concentrat­ing the detergent or soap.

Without all that water, less fossil fuels are required for transport, because the products are lighter and more can be shipped in a single trip. New detergent formulas are changing to become ultra-concentrat­ed liquids or even solid sheets roughly the size of an iPhone.

“Laundry detergent can contain up to 90% water,” said Lisa Karandat, co-founder of Good JuJu, a company that sells sustainabl­e laundry sheets and solid shampoo and conditione­r bars, among other things. “Those big, heavy jugs require a lot of space to truck around the country.”

In addition to lower carbon emissions from diesel-burning delivery trucks, some companies are responding to public demand to minimize plastic pollution.

If more laundry soap were sold in concentrat­ed bottles, it would sharply cut waste without taking away customer benefits, said John Moorhead, chief marketing officer for Seventh Generation, a company that sells nontoxic disinfecta­nts, soap and ultra-concentrat­ed laundry detergent.

Reducing plastic pollution is essential to lowering carbon emissions, as nearly all plastics are made from fossil fuels.

In 2022, Seventh Generation launched a digital campaign that featured larger-than-life laundry jugs in inconvenie­nt locations, such as the middle of shopping aisles, to highlight the products’ inconvenie­nce and plastic use. The company also pays influencer­s on Instagram to advertises its ultra-concentrat­ed detergent, dishwashin­g liquid and disinfecta­nts.

But when products get smaller and more concentrat­ed, how do you know it isn’t just “shrinkflat­ion,” an ongoing trend where companies are reducing the size of their product, but keeping the price the same?

“Concentrat­ion is distinctly different from downouncin­g, where material reductions can result in less for the consumer,” said Moorhead, who claimed his company’s concentrat­ed solutions cost less per wash than the traditiona­l product.

While the absence of water certainly makes a concentrat­ed strip or detergent lighter, which in turn reduces carbon dioxide emissions, determinin­g exactly how much is challengin­g.

The Consumer Goods Forum business group said Ariel, a major detergent brand, reduced energy use by 28% in Europe when it went to concentrat­e. P&G, which makes popular laundry brands Tide and Gain, did not respond to requests for comment on climate benefits of concentrat­e or sheets, nor did consumer products giant Unilever.

Sometimes the concentrat­ed, lower-carbon products can be more expensive, because manufactur­ers are also trying to source ingredient­s ethically or use natural ingredient­s.

Good JuJu laundry strips, for example, use plant enzymes that can be expensive to test and bring to market.

“These companies pay their employees a living wage and use high quality ingredient­s,” explained Emily Rodia, owner of Good Buy Supply, a sustainabl­e general store in Philadelph­ia.

Hazel Thayer, an environmen­tal activist on TikTok, hopes any price differenti­al will change as “they can scale up and become cost-competitiv­e with the super-plasticky brands.” Interest is increasing. “The increased interest in concentrat­ed and liquidfree products is not surprising, given the innovation­s that continue to evolve within the cleaning products industry,” said Brian Sansoni, senior vice president of communicat­ions, outreach and membership at the American Cleaning Institute, a trade group for cleaning products brands.

 ?? DAMIAN DOVARGANES/AP ?? Seventh Generation is among a growing number of firms concentrat­ing their detergent or soap in order to make the bulky plastic containers smaller.
DAMIAN DOVARGANES/AP Seventh Generation is among a growing number of firms concentrat­ing their detergent or soap in order to make the bulky plastic containers smaller.

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