Life Lessons 101

How to Get the Oil Out of Your Life

Stock quotes in this article: KMB , PG , CL , DOW , DD , WFMI , WMT  

Kimberly Clark (KMB Quote), Procter & Gamble (PG Quote) and Colgate-Palmolive (CL Quote) have raised or are planning to raise prices on a broad range of items, including diapers, detergent and toothpaste.

In the chemical sector, Dow Chemical (DOW Quote) said it "will raise the price of all of its products by up to 20 percent" because of rising fuel, transportation and source-material costs. BASF blamed raw material costs for its decision to raise prices on some products. And DuPont (DD Quote) cited similar reasons for a string of price hikes this spring.

Realizing just how many uses corporations have invented for fossil-fuel derivatives like petroleum jelly, paraffin, mineral oil, Lycra, synthetic rubber and myriad plastics also drives home how much synthetic ingredients have supplanted organic ingredients.

Get Rid of It

Subbing in items that aren't made with petroleum is easier for some types of products than others -- sometimes it's not possible at all. But here is some low-hanging fruit to go after:

  • Opt for clothes made from natural fibers like cotton, linen and silk, or from recycled materials (like some fleece), and try to avoid polyester and spandex.
  • Stop buying plastic serving and storage bowls and rediscover Fiestaware, Corningware and Pyrex.
  • Trade conventional laundry detergents for eco-brands that rely on plant-based surfactants rather than oil-based ones.
  • Steer clear of health and beauty products that have petrolatum, mineral oil, paraffin or phthalates. Seek out brands that use botanical ingredients instead.
  • Borrow and lend washable plastic toys instead of buying new ones.
  • If you're headed to your back yard and not a malaria-infested jungle, skip the chemicals and fight off mosquitoes with repellents containing citronella and lemongrass.
  • Buy fruit and vegetables from local and regional sources whenever you can to reduce the fuel-poundage behind your produce choices.
  • Buy organic when you can to cut down on the chemicals in your produce.

Eco-responsible products are often more expensive than their mass-manufactured counterparts. With prices for conventional products spiking the way they are, that eco-premium might seem smaller than it once did. But given that consumers already are feeling squeezed, paying extra might also seem more extravagant than ever, as Tom Philpott points out in his Grist blog on food.

And there's often controversy about how much total energy is saved or spent by choosing renewable resources over synthetic, as has been the case with grocery bags and clothing.

For me, the argument usually comes down in favor of renewable products because they have better cradle-to-grave potential. We can find greener, cleaner, more efficient and more ethical ways to grow cotton, trees, plants and food and we can get better at disposing of them in ways that allow them to biodegrade. Unless we recycle synthetics, they become permanent waste.

Influencing Industry

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