Happi Staff09.29.20
Environmental data on 200-plus chemicals in the US consumer cleaning product supply chain are now available, in pilot phase, through the American Cleaning Institute’s Cleaning Product Ingredient Safety Initiative database.
"The environmental data available in ACI’s Cleaning Product Ingredient Safety Initiative makes public screening level risk assessment summaries for both human health and environmental health, which can be used to meet regulatory requirements,” said Kathleen Stanton, ACI associate VP, technical and international affairs. "The expansion represents a continued commitment to transparency for the cleaning product supply chain.”
In addition to developing a quantitative estimate of environmental exposure, ACI published on its website a description of each ingredient, including:
• the types of products in which it is used
• the form of those products
• the ingredient’s function within each of those products
• the typical concentration range among the products
• the most relevant routes of exposure associated with the use of those products.
This database was designed to characterize ingredients that are contained in household cleaning products using a risk-based approach in an aquatic environment. The results can be used to determine if environmental risks are anticipated to be negligible or if additional data are required to make a more realistic assessment. It will be most useful to regulators, researchers, and cleaning product industry formulators and suppliers looking for detailed information on ingredients used in consumer cleaning products.
ACI’s goal is to complete screening level environmental assessments for all ingredients in the database.
"The environmental data available in ACI’s Cleaning Product Ingredient Safety Initiative makes public screening level risk assessment summaries for both human health and environmental health, which can be used to meet regulatory requirements,” said Kathleen Stanton, ACI associate VP, technical and international affairs. "The expansion represents a continued commitment to transparency for the cleaning product supply chain.”
In addition to developing a quantitative estimate of environmental exposure, ACI published on its website a description of each ingredient, including:
• the types of products in which it is used
• the form of those products
• the ingredient’s function within each of those products
• the typical concentration range among the products
• the most relevant routes of exposure associated with the use of those products.
This database was designed to characterize ingredients that are contained in household cleaning products using a risk-based approach in an aquatic environment. The results can be used to determine if environmental risks are anticipated to be negligible or if additional data are required to make a more realistic assessment. It will be most useful to regulators, researchers, and cleaning product industry formulators and suppliers looking for detailed information on ingredients used in consumer cleaning products.
ACI’s goal is to complete screening level environmental assessments for all ingredients in the database.