Displaying 1 - 23 of 23
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Chemicals of concern are in your food packaging. This may help.
2
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Where do the circular economy and green chemistry meet, and how can business advance them both?
by Elsa Wenzel
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Environmental NGO EDF has identified toxic chemicals of concern that must be addressed to ensure health and safety.
by Tom Neltner
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Article
Take timber and denim, for example.
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Article
Clean Production Action evaluates the landscape of businesses and NGOs pushing for safer chemicals.
7
Article
An exclusive excerpt from the new book by Bill McDonough and Michael Braungart.
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Article
It's not as easy as it may seem for a manufacturer to disclose to the public a complete list of all product ingredients.
by Tish Tablan
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Article
Despite opposition, CS found a healthy market demanding safer and transparent products.
10
Article
What happens when a leadership company loses its bearings.
11
Article
Green chemistry has become a well known set of tools to design lower-impact products, but sustainable chemistry is one of the key building blocks of the innovations we need for long-term sustainability solutions.
by Dave Kepler
12
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Chuck Bennett, the VP for Earth and Community Care at Aveda talks about the origin of his job title, the company's commitment to Cradle to Cradle design, their synergistic relationship with parent company Estee Lauder, and more.
13
Article
The public at large probably doesn't think of the chemical giant as a major green player, but the company has made a big push toward green in four main areas, driven in part by customer and market demands.
14
Article
Skincare has become an industry where there are green products that underperform, and effective products full of secret -- and often toxic -- ingredients. But a small number of companies are working to change that.
15
Article
The company announced that it is donating 50,000 pairs of pantyhose to groups that collect hair clippings from salons for use in oil-absorbing booms, as part of the effort to address the Deepwater Horizon oil spill.
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Article
Over the past several years, the look of the laundry detergent aisle of your supermarket has completely changed, driven largely by Method, and followed by the sector's biggest players.
by Marc Gunther
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Article
Is BPA safe? Neither scientists, government regulators, nor corporations can come to an agreement. But recent news from General Mills and Coca-Cola suggest that a resolution is drawing close.
by Marc Gunther
18
Article
IBM has eliminated from its chip manufacturing processes the use of perfluorooctane sulfonate (PFOS) and perfluorooctanoic acid (PFOA), two compounds found to be bioaccumulative and persistent.
19
Article
Facing risks from toxic toys to questions about nanomaterials, smart companies have begun to take dramatic steps forward in disclosing potentially toxic ingredients to investors, customers and policymakers alike.
20
Article
The first of a three-part series about developing a benchmark to help companies embrace green chemistry and toxic reductions explores which firms are leading the charge, and how they benefit from designing greener products.
21
Article
Strong supplier partnerships, green design objectives, and sharing best practices with government, NGOs and peers have allowed Nike, HP and SC Johnson to weed out toxic materials from their products, according to a new report.
22
Article
A new report from ChemSec and Clean Production Action highlights the innovations driven by electronics manufacturers that have removed toxics like bromine and chlorine from high-tech gadgets.
23
Article
Steve Wasik apologizes for not revealing the presence of bisphenol A in early models of his company's reusable water bottles, and explains how being a green CEO means much more than just environmental stewardship.
by Steve Wasik