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Environmental Dangers In Cleaning Products

Could That Fish Dinner Be Filled With Toxins From Your Cleaning Products?

Some of the chemicals in traditional home cleaning products are so toxic that they make it past any water treatment efforts and end up in the environment where they poison marine life and even your tap water. You could be drinking your laundry detergent! It’s easy to instinctively use these everyday household cleaners because they’ve been a part of our cleaning life for so many years. But it’s time to understand that these products could be doing a great deal of harm to the environment (and your family).  Please take a look at this guide on the environmental dangers of cleaning products and let’s get educated on what to look out for and how to make changes.

Fighting against ecosystem degradation involves enlightening ourselves about cleaning products and the detrimental effects they can have on the environment. Making the switch to eco-friendly cleaning habits with simple baking soda, vinegar, and water is easier than you might think (and just as effective) and 100% more healthy for the environment and you. 

Environmental Concerns Regarding Cleaning Products From The EPA

Cleaning products are released into the environment during normal use by rinsing down the drain and through the evaporation of volatile components.

#1. Polluting Our Water & Marine Life

Water pollution from everyday cleaning products happens when you use cleaners with toxic ingredients. Every cleaner that is washed down the drain eventually ends up in wastewater treatment facilities, and then into rivers, lakes, and oceans where it causes environmental harm to sea life by polluting the water. 

Water Pollution Proof

Ingredients In Cleaning Products That Are Environmentally Dangerous

Try to familiarize yourself with some of these ingredient names or what to look for as labels on cleaning products. And stay away from them as an eco-friendly action.

  1. If a cleaning product is labeled “antibacterial” check the ingredients.
  2. If a cleaning says it kills bacteria, fungi, and mildew, then it will also kill algae, which are a very important element in our water ecosystems and in the food chain.

How To Reduce Your Environmental Impact

  1. Ask yourself if a particular cleaning product is really necessary. Or can the project be taken care of with natural ingredients, tools, and some elbow grease? 
  2. Avoid products marked “Danger” “Poison” “Caution” or “Warning”.
  3. Look for products with ingredients that are easily biodegradable and break down quickly in wastewater treatment facilities.
  4. Look for all-natural products, and certified by an independent institution, such as EcoCert (an internationally recognized certification that guarantees environmental respect with strict requirements for products, more stringent than other “green” labels found in North America like Ecologo and GreenSeal, which allow many ingredients that are suspected toxins, carcinogens or hormone disruptors).
  5. Use less; follow directions and reduce the amount of cleaning products ending up in wastewater. 
  6. To make it easier for purchasers to identify greener cleaning products, EPA manages the Safer Choice program, which certifies products that contain safer ingredients for human health and the environment.  Safer Choice-Certified Product Search.
  7. Additionally, EPA has developed a set of Recommendations in several cleaning product categories, that identify credible and effective private sector standards/ecolabels.

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