Green living tips - http://www.greenlivingtips.com
Shampoo and the planet
http://www.greenlivingtips.com/articles/52/1/Shampoo-and-the-planet.html
By Green Living Tips
Published on 12/7/2006
 

What's in your bottle of shampoo? Could you be unwittingly poisoning the environment? I took a look at the ingredients on my shampoo bottle today and was rather disgusted by the chemical cocktail I've been applying to my hair and flushing down the drain.


Is your shampoo poisoning the environment?

I looked at my bottle of shampoo today and my hair stood on end before I even washed it. The front label states "Vitamin E Moisture Rich Shampoo - Professional performance formula", but what I read on the back made me wonder about the volume of potential poisons I've been flushing into the environment over the last 3 decades, simply through washing my hair.

Having a blackwater system now for recycling our household waste water has also made me a little more conscious about this kind of thing. If we put chemicals down our drains that upsets the good bacteria, they can't do their job properly in chewing up all the nasties. Throw it out of balance, and restoring the balance can take a long while. I'll cover the subject of blackwater recycling systems in another article - they are fascinating setups that somewhat mimic the wider environment and it's been quite an education having one.

Here are the ingredients of my shampoo and what I discovered.

Sodium Laureth Sulfate - used in clinical testing as a primary skin irritant. Tests on lab animals indicate material may cause mutagenic effects.

Cocamidopropyl Betaine - potential irritant and potentially contaminated with or breaking down into chemicals linked to cancer,

Ammonium Chloride - Harmful if swallowed. May be harmful by inhalation. Skin, eye and respiratory irritant

Tocopheryl Acetate - Vitamin E

Camellia Sensis Leaf Extract - OK depending on extraction process

Fennel - OK depending on extraction process

Fruit Extract - Hrm.. depending on extraction process

Epilobium Angustifolium Extract - OK depending on extraction process

Sunflower Extract - OK depending on extraction process

Hazel leaf Extract - OK depending on extraction process

Sweet Almond fruit extract - OK depending on extraction process

Panthenol -  Vitamin B5

Cocodimonium Hydroxypropyl Hydrolized wheat protein - not sure

Quaternium-22 - May contain harmful impurities or form toxic breakdown products

Butylene Glycol - not assessed for safety by Cosmetics Ingredient Review board

Propylene Glycol -  allows other chemicals to penetrate into the skin, suspected Respiratory, Skin or sense organ, Immunotoxicity and Neurotoxicity hazards

Polyquaternium-10 - a mildly irritating toxic polymer

Sodium Chloride - common salt

Tetrasodium EDTA - allows other chemicals to penetrate into the skin

Citric Acid - OK depending on extraction process

Hexylene Glycol - neurotoxin, sensitizer and irritant

Triethanolomine - may contain residual levels of nitrosamines, a carcinogen

Methylchloroisothiazolinone -immune system toxin, lung sensitizer,

Geraniol - not assessed for safety by Cosmetics Ingredient Review board

Butylphenyl Methylpropional - not assessed for safety by Cosmetics Ingredient Review board

Linalool - not assessed for safety by Cosmetics Ingredient Review board

Hexyl Cinnamal - not assessed for safety by Cosmetics Ingredient Review board

Limonene - a hydrocarbon that poses potential risks to wildlife and the environment through water contamination. Carcinogen to some animals

Fragrance (I hate to think)

OK, so before I start sounding overly paranoid, I'm well aware that everything is made up of chemicals - even natural ingredients. 2 potentially nasty chemicals can also combine to make something quite safe and useful - e.g.; sodium + chloride = salt. The type and level of chemical hazard does also greatly depend on quantity and manufacturing - but the point is, they are being manufactured; in bulk - and that in itself poses huge risks for the environment. Nature may produce similar chemicals, but it's a natural process in harmony with the planet and environment.

And here's a real kicker - like so many other products in our modern lives, many chemicals used in shampoos have their origins as derivatives of crude oil.

So, do I really need the above chemical shampoo cocktail to wash my hair? No. After all that, I think I'll just stick with vegetable soap until I find a more earth-friendly shampoo. I really don't need "body and bounce" anyway since I have short hair :).

What does your shampoo bottle say? Could you be unwittingly poisoning yourself and the environment? Research the ingredients listed on your shampoo bottle.