Palm oil / Palmitate

Triclosan
11th September 2015
Show all

 

 

 

Did you know cosmetics are endangering the Orangutan?

Palm oil is in roughly 50% of all packaged goods. from cookies, peanut butter, and breakfast cereal to cleaning products, laundry detergent, lipstick, and body lotion.

Are you wondering how that’s possible, because you don’t see the words “palm oil” on many of the ingredient labels in your pantry?

Here’s the scoop: Palm oil is often disguised, hidden behind many different ingredient names you probably don’t recognize when you go to your pantry or bathroom to check. To make things even more confusing for you as a consumer, sometimes companies will only disclose ingredients like “vegetable oil,” and though that vegetable oil blend likely contains palm oil, it’s not always a labeling requirement.

To help you navigate these confusing waters and avoid unwittingly voting for rainforest destruction with your dollars, here is a partial list of other names for palm oil-derived ingredients:*

  • PKO – Palm Kernel Oil
  • PKO fractionations: Palm Kernel Stearin (PKs); Palm Kernel Olein (PKOo)
  • PHPKO – Partially hydrogenated Palm Oil
  • FP(K)O – Fractionated Palm Oil
  • OPKO – Organic Palm Kernel Oil
  • Palmitate – Vitamin A or Asorbyl Palmitate (NOTE: Vitamin A Palmitate is a very common ingredient in breakfast cereals and we have confirmed 100% of the samples we’ve investigated to be derived from palm oil)
  • Palmate
  • Sodium Laureth Sulphate (Can also be from coconut)
  • Sodium Lauryl Sulphates (can also be from ricinus oil)
  • Sodium dodecyl Sulphate (SDS or NaDS)
  • Elaeis Guineensis
  • Glyceryl Stearate
  • Stearic Acid
  • Chemicals which contain palm oil
  • Steareth -2
  • Steareth -20
  • Sodium Lauryl Sulphate
  • Sodium lauryl sulfoacetate (coconut and/or palm)
  • Hydrated palm glycerides
  • Sodium isostearoyl lactylaye (derived from vegetable stearic acid)
  • Cetyl palmitate and octyl palmitate (names with palmitate at the end are usually derived from palm oil, but as in the case of Vitamin A Palmitate, very rarely a company will use a different vegetable oil)

*Disclaimer: Through research we’ve found that Vitamin A Palmitate can be derived from any combination of vegetable oil such as olive, coconut, canola and/or palm oil. Though in all the cases we’ve documented, companies use palm oil to make derivatives like Vitamin A Palmitate, it can be tricky to know for sure.

source: http://www.ran.org/palm_oil_s_dirty_secret_the_many_ingredient_names_for_palm_oil

Palm oil plantations are the main driver for deforestation in Indonesia and Malaysia. These two regions account for 85 percent of global production of palm oil.  The United Nations Environment Programme has announced that palm oil plantations are now the leading cause of rainforest destruction in Malaysia and Indonesia.

An area of forest equal to 300 soccer fields is being destroyed every hour. Deforestation for the establishment of palm oil plantations is responsible for habitat loss for threatened and endangered species.

Priority species impacted by forest clearing are the Asian elephant, tiger, Sumatran rhinoceros and the orangutan. The Asian elephant and Bornean orangutan are endangered and the tiger, Sumatran rhinoceros and Sumatran orangutan are Critically Endangered. Source: www.orangutan.org.au

More reading here:  http://www.healthylifetricks.com/this-is-why-you-should-not-buy-anything-with-palm-oil-in-it-again/

Image courtesy of http://www.greenpeace.org.uk/

I talked about retinyl palmitate in my video blog post on sunscreen so here is yet another reason to avoid it… all rather depressing reading isn’t it…what do you think?

#_SusieEllis

 

 

5 Comments

  1. Verushka says:

    Interesting read will be reading my labels more carefully.

  2. Nicole says:

    Interesting facts and just a bit scary. Thank you for the research.

  3. Robyn says:

    This is terrible! How can companies find so many loop holes to put their products through? Deforestation scares the heck out of me.

  4. Sara says:

    This is awful, surely they don’t need to use Palm oil

    • Susie says:

      There are a few places that are responsibly sustaining the forest but you would never know that from a label unfortunately 🙁

Leave a Reply to Susie Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *