Lintner | Global Regulatory Issues for the Cosmetics Industry | E-Book | sack.de
E-Book

E-Book, Englisch, 295 Seiten

Reihe: Personal Care and Cosmetic Technology

Lintner Global Regulatory Issues for the Cosmetics Industry

E-Book, Englisch, 295 Seiten

Reihe: Personal Care and Cosmetic Technology

ISBN: 978-0-8155-1964-5
Verlag: Elsevier Reference Monographs
Format: PDF
Kopierschutz: Adobe DRM (»Systemvoraussetzungen)



This volume examines regulatory issues of ingredients, manufacturing, and finished products, as well as claim substantiation, packaging, and advertising. A chapter on Chinese regulations will be one of the first about this country to be published in book form.
• Includes a regulatory map of India and China
• Global IP protection strategies
• REACH and European Regulatory standards
• 'Green chemistry' in relation to cosmetics and regulation
* Simplifies global regulations for anyone exporting cosmetics.
* Excellent reference not only for manufacturing and marketing, but for legal departments and packaging as well.
* Describes how to develop a global regulatory strategy.
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Chapter 1 Green Chemistry: Foundations in Cosmetic Sciences
Amy S. Cannon 1 , John C. Warner 2 1 Beyond Benign, Woburn, MA, USA 2 Warner Babcock Institute for Green Chemistry, Woburn, MA, USA 1.1 Introduction The manufacturing industries have been experiencing increasing pressure from regulatory and government agencies and society in general on issues concerning human health and the environment. While sustainability in its “big picture” ideals are easy for individuals to understand, it is at the practical level that clarity is less forthcoming. As corporations strive to meet various sustainability objectives within operations such as recycling and energy audits, fundamental incorporation at the most basic levels often do not exist. Sustainability should include every aspect of an industry's operations. Green chemistry speaks to the chemists and materials scientists to incorporate sustainable principles into their practices of creating products and developing processes. The field of green chemistry, since its beginnings in the early 1990s, has been growing in the scientific community at an ever-increasing rate. What began as a science around synthetic organic transformations has expanded to incorporate literally every aspect of chemistry, chemical engineering, and manufacturing sciences. In the mid-1990s, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) began an awards program called the Presidential Green Chemistry Challenge Awards [1]. Each year five awards are given out to small and large businesses and academics for technologies that demonstrate the principles of green chemistry and that are also practical and can be commercialized. Green chemistry at its roots is about “real world” solutions to pollution prevention. For a technology to be successful in this awards program, and in fact to be considered “green chemistry,” it is not sufficient for the technology to be merely more benign than alternative technologies, it must also be viable in the marketplace. For a green chemistry technology to be viable in a competitive marketplace, it must satisfy two additional criteria in addition to product safety (Figure 1.1). It must demonstrate superior product performance; for example, environmentally benign cleaners that do not clean will not be desirable. It must also demonstrate appropriate economics. Society has demonstrated its unwillingness to pay a premium for environmentally benign technology. Adding these new criteria to product development is far from an easy task. Yet scientists in industry and academia have risen to the challenge and the more than 60 award winners of the Presidential Green Chemistry Challenge Awards program are testament to the ingenuity and innovation being applied. Figure 1.1 Three requirements for green chemistry technologies. Interestingly, when one reviews a list of the Presidential Green Chemistry Challenge Award winners, one finds a scarcity of any technologies that could be classified as belonging wholly to the cosmetics and personal care industry. However, a review of the nomination packages shows that there are very few proposals being submitted from the cosmetics and personal care industry. This is not to say that some green chemistry is not already happening in this industry, but certainly there is a great deal of opportunity. 1.2 Green Chemistry Green chemistry is a set of principles that speak to the design scientist at the earliest part of a product development program. It incorporates downstream implications at the fundamental molecular level. By anticipating potential problems around scale-up associated with regulatory and toxicological issues, it is possible to not only reduce costs from a variety of internalized and externalized sources but also streamline operations by increasing efficiency and time to market. These principles were published in 1998 in the book titled Green Chemistry Theory and Practice [2]. This book is a testament to the concerns of regulatory issues in the cosmetics and personal care industries. This chapter will discuss the twelve principles of green chemistry in the context of the cosmetics and personal care industries and how the concerns can be addressed at a fundamental level (Figure 1.2). While all the examples presented in this chapter may not be directly extracted from technologies immediately recognizable as being from this industry sector, it is hoped that they are similar enough to provide relative illustrative examples. Figure 1.2 The twelve principles of green chemistry [2]. 1.3 The Twelve Principles of Green Chemistry Principle 1: Pollution Prevention. It is better to prevent waste than to treat or clean up waste after it is formed. The first principle is merely a technical restatement of the old adage “a pinch of prevention is worth a pound of cure.” It focuses on looking at the materials flow in a product life cycle, with an eye toward reducing waste before it is ever created, recognizing the costs associated with disposal, cleanup, and remediation. When one considers the ethical and economic implications of using hazardous materials, it becomes immediately obvious that a safer, nontoxic technology (with identical product performance and economics) will always be superior in the marketplace. The economics and product performance is only part of the story. One need only pick up a newspaper, turn on the radio, or watch television to witness the explosion of environmental consciousness in every aspect of society. The demands by consumers for “sustainable” products are only going to increase in the years to come. Pollution prevention is best addressed by creating technologies and products that reduce waste at the very beginning stages of their life cycles. Countless examples are testament to this principle and many speak to the heart of the environmental movement. Environmental disasters are far too common in our history. And, the cleanup is unfortunately quite costly. In the United States, the EPA estimates that nearly $6.5 billion has been spent toward their brownfield initiative since its inception in 1995 [3]. It is estimated that the initiative involves nearly 450,000 brownfield sites throughout the United States. It is evident that it is better to have not created this waste rather than spend billions of dollars for cleanup after the fact. Principle 2: Atom Economy. Synthetic methods should be designed to maximize the incorporation of all materials used in the process into the final product. A typical product life cycle begins with the extraction of raw materials from the earth, followed by the functionalizing of the raw materials into useful feedstock chemicals that can be transformed into the various chemical products that we require for making products. The synthesis of the chemical products involves the use of various reagents in order to create the desired product. Many reagents are used to perform a specific function on the molecule, but are not actually incorporated into the product. The reagents that are not incorporated into the product typically result in waste in a chemical process. Throughout the history of chemistry, the quantitative success of a chemical transformation has typically focused on the concept of product yield. This number is based on the number of grams of products synthesized divided by the number of yields theoretically possible. While this measure provides some insight into the productivity of a chemical reaction, or series of reactions, much information is lost. Many synthetic transformations available in the chemist's toolbox do not merely follow the simple description of compound A is converted to compound B (Figure 1.3). More often than not, these transformations are far more complex with a number of reactants coming together to form a number of products (Figure 1.3). While the desired product may be obtained in high yield, it is possible and in fact often the case that along with the desired product an equivalent amount of some other anticipated by-product is formed. Figure 1.3 An idealized versus a typical synthetic transformation. A: Starting material; B: Product; R: Reagent; C, D: Coproducts or by-products. The atom economy of a reaction is based on a calculation developed by Barry Trost [4]: the ratio of the molecular weight of the atoms used to make a product divided by the molecular weight of all the reagents and starting materials used to make the product. It is a simple measure of the amount of waste created in a chemical process based on the atoms used in a process. This principle speaks to developing molecular transformations that incorporate a maximum number of atoms into the final product thus minimizing the atoms that appear as waste. Principle 3: Less Hazardous Synthesis. ...


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