"If a negative environmental impact can be lessened or avoided, both industry and consumers have a responsibility to do so," said Martin Wolf of Seventh Generation and a leading authority on the environmental impact of household cleaning products. "This is a landmark moment, and as a company that's worked for years to make this desperately needed change a reality, we're celebrating a well-earned victory in the effort to build a healthier, cleaner world."
Contrary to popular belief, phosphate use is still legally permitted in dishwasher detergents, and phosphates may constitute as much as 24% of a product's formula.Dishwasher detergents contain levels of phosphorus as high as 8%, which translates to a phosphate level of 24%.Once phosphates are discharged into the environment, they promotealgae growth in local waters.These sudden blooms of algae trigger a process called eutrophication in which local waters become starved of oxygen and devoid of life.This issue is of special concern to anyone living near a lake or pond.
For a decade, Seventh Generation has taken the lead among businesses to ban phosphates, and lent its influence to ban phosphates in dishwasher detergents. The company, headquartered on the shores of Vermont's Lake Champlain, has provided hours of expert testimony and handed out samples of its no-phosphate formula as proof it could be done effectively.Seventh Generation also partnered with non-profit environmental organizations, such as Clean Water Action, working for meaningful change, and as a member of the ACI, has urged the change at industry meetings.
"This is a very encouraging and gratifying step in the right direction," said Jon Scott, spokesperson for Clean Water Action. "Combined with previous legislative bans on phosphates in laundry detergent and 16 state bans of phosphates in dishwasher detergent, this change adds new momentum to U.S. water protection efforts by removing a significant source of phosphate pollution before it enters our water."
States that previously banned or improved regulation of phosphates in dishwasher detergent include Illinois, Indiana, Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, Montana, New Hampshire, Ohio, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Utah, Vermont, Virginia, Washington and Wisconsin, among others.