Abstract

The environmental impact of a plant-based shampoo produced and marketed in Zurich, Switzerland, was analyzed using the life cycle assessment method. Beside the identification of environmental hotspots and mitigation possibilities, the focus of the study was on the analysis and comparison of different refill offers. The results of the study show that one hair wash using the investigated shampoo is related to greenhouse gas emissions of 161 g CO2eq. For all investigated impact categories, the use phase represents the dominant life stage, except for land use, which is dominated by the production of the purely plant-based shampoo ingredients. The environmental impact related to the use phase is highly sensitive on the consumers’ showering habits, such as water consumption and water temperature, due to predominantly fossil-based heating in Zurich. On the producer’s side, a switch to renewable energy sources both for heating and electricity is identified as most effective measure to reduce the environmental impact of the manufacturing phase. As to the product end-of-life, the results suggest that emissions of the shampoo ingredients after wastewater treatment have a negligible impact on freshwater ecotoxicity. In this context, a need for further research is identified with respect to characterization factors and specific removal rates in wastewater treatment plants. From a life cycle perspective, packaging production and disposal have rather low contributions. Offering refill possibilities can reduce the packaging related contributions by several percentage points, however, higher mitigation potentials are found for use phase and manufacturing.

Highlights

  • This paper summarizes the results of an life cycle assessment (LCA) study carried out for such a product: a natural shampoo that is produced by a small manufactory and that is sold in glass bottles mainly on a regional market in Switzerland

  • According to the life cycle assessment carried out in this study, one hair wash using the investigated shampoo is connected to greenhouse gas emissions of 161 g CO2 eq and a resource use of non-renewable energy carriers equivalent to 2.5 MJ, based on the IPCC

  • The results shown in the previous section refer to the packaging scenario 1, assuming shampoo is sold in a 500 mL glass bottle with a dispenser pump made of PE and PP

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Summary

Introduction

Publisher’s Note: MDPI stays neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations. Shampoo represents one of the most common personal care products: In European households, shampoo is used with an average application frequency of two to three times per week [1], amounting to about 2 kg of shampoo used per person each year [2]. While previously rather neglected as a research topic [3], the environmental impact of personal care products from a life cycle perspective has received increasing attention in the last decade. Publications on life cycle assessment (LCA) of shampoo using a cradleto-grave approach are still rare

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