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The Term Organic and what it means for Tri Nature products
Organic
I am often asked whether Tri Nature products are organic or not. If the definition of Organic is applied in the same way as it is for other businesses, then the answer is Yes. However, Tri Nature doesn’t play by the same rules as most other companies. Tri Nature Chemist Brian McLean’s requirement for absolute and brutal honesty can, in very rare instances, make things more complicated for customers. Use of the word organic is one of those instances.
Below is an article written by Brian (in roughly 2012 I believe) in which he explains his reluctance to get the products Certified as organic.
The term “Organic”: a conflict of integrity and profitability
Author:
Brian McLean, Research Chemist, Tri Nature Pty Ltd
Brian McLean is one of the Managing Directors of Tri Nature Pty Ltd. Brian’s knowledge and expertise
have won Tri Nature many manufacturing awards, most recently the Australian Business Award for Best
Eco-Friendly Product in 2011. His dedication to environmental technologies has identified him as an
‘in-demand’ author of many published articles on this industry.Article:
There are two broad classes of chemical ingredients in nature – organic and inorganic.
As a general rule, organic (carbon based) compounds are animal or plant based, and inorganic compounds are mineral based, although many plants contain inorganic minerals in their structure. Both types are essential to our existence and survival, and neither can be considered either “good” or “bad” simply because of their chemical category.Unfortunately, in seeking to create an awareness of good ecological practice, the environmental movement chose the term “organic” to indicate a safe and sustainable method of agriculture. This created a confusion of terms.
How is it for example, that a vegetable, which is a blend of organic and inorganic compounds, if treated with an insecticide (an organic compound) cannot then be deemed “certified organic”?To further exacerbate the situation, numerous organisations around the world set themselves up as self appointed guardians of what was and what was not “certified organic” and created benchmarks by which products could be labelled accordingly with their support and authority. The rules, individually and collectively, changed and evolved as various pressure groups asserted their influence until now the original concept has been lost and the certification process has become ludicrous.
To consider that a cosmetic or specialty product that has gone through numerous chemical processes can be “certified organic” is ridiculous, and to consider that a product marketed this way is considered any safer or more effective is equally absurd.
Australian government authorities are currently assessing the situation, with a view of legislating guidelines that will bring some reason to this dilemma that has led to a great deal of misinterpretation and misleading marketing.
It should be clarified at this point that Tri Nature supports the growing of vegetable and other plant crops without the use of pesticides or artificial fertilisers. It is the terminology and the corruption of the original purpose that we find unpalatable.Tri Nature is very careful in its choice of raw ingredients. We do not use products sourced from genetically modified crops. In the majority of cases, and where it is possible to do so, we ensure that crops from which our ingredients are made are grown without the use of pesticides or weedicides. In all cases we guarantee all our ingredients are free from any chemical residues by a certificate of analysis or individual testing.
Driving to save Mother Earth
save-our-mother-earth I’m climbing up onto my own personal bandwagon today. I would be a liar if I said there wasn’t a HUGE part of me that is writing this particular post purely in the hope of improving my daily driving frustrations. But when I put some thought into it, making the changes I am going to suggest below really can make a big difference to Mother Earth. So please, join me on a drive through the road-ragey part of my brain that secretly wishes sometimes we were all in dodgem cars so I could ram people.
Left Wing
I am going to start with one of the most basic principles of driving in Australia. KEEP LEFT. 2 little words. Pretty clear instructions. And yet, on a daily basis, I am totally astounded by how many people seem to fail to put these words into action in their driving.
I do a lot of freeway and highway driving because I live in a semi rural area. During my many hours of commuting, I have come to the conclusion that traffic congestion could almost be completely eliminated if we just spent a little bit more time educating future drivers about keeping left. Ok, maybe not completely eliminated, but I reckon we could make a good dent in it (ha ha… dent…get it?….car humour…sorry).
Did you know that, in Victoria, where the speed limit is 80 or higher, it is against the law to drive in the right hand lane unless you are overtaking someone? That’s right! It’s the law!
There are similar laws in other states and territories. It’s the reason you pass a sign every couple of kilometres on freeways that says “Keep left unless overtaking”. It’s not just there for decoration. Not only that, if you drive in the right hand lane without overtaking, you can be fined and lose 3 points off your license.
Now I can hear many of you piping up at this point with arguments such as “if you weren’t speeding, you wouldn’t need to overtake” and “I’m doing the speed limit so it shouldn’t be an issue”. I have a couple of things for you to consider.
Most speedos are inaccurate. Almost everyone has been through one of those overhead speed checker thingies at some stage and you would have noticed that your speedo generally shows somewhere in the vicinity of about 5kms higher than your actual speed. This varies from car to car. So even though your needle shows you firmly on the speed limit, in reality you’re probably going 3 to 5 kms slower. Everyone else is also driving with an inaccurate speedo. So while you think you’re doing 100, the person behind you may think you’re sitting on 95.
It’s such a shame this is one of those laws that never really gets enforced here in Victoria. Setting aside the emotional trauma suffered by frustrated commuters stuck behind tandem drivers blocking the road, and ignoring all the safety aspects, there’s a big environmental cost to consider.
Slowing down and speeding up again uses more fuel than just maintaining the same speed. It may only make a dollar or so difference to you personally each week, but multiply that across all the cars on the road and now we’re looking at a big chunk of our precious, limited resources that could be saved!
If we all make an effort to keep left and just let people past, traffic would flow a lot better, there would be less braking and accelerating which means more efficient use of fuel and less wear and tear on cars. Lets not forget that wear and tear costs money and also uses up resources in replacement parts.
And really, why not let people past? You’re still moving forwards. Moving over and letting someone past isn’t going to cost you anything. If they want to go faster than others, good for them. If they are choosing to speed, blocking them is not going to make for safer roads. It’s much more likely to end with the speeder doing something even more risky and unsafe to get past. Better to let them go in my book.
If you have a Diesel car.
My car runs on Diesel. I have had a Diesel car for at least 10 years. I learned pretty quickly that it’s splashy and smelly and there was always some residue on the pump handle. No biggie. I use paper towel to hold the pump or wash my hands afterwards. Easy done.
Not sure if anyone else has noticed that some servos now seem to offer trucks cheaper diesel than cars. This really annoyed me so I set about finding out why. The bloke working at the counter in the BP store couldn’t tell me. Super helpful…
It turns out that since so many cars are now on diesel, and there are so many women driving these diesel cars, they have put an additive in the diesel to make it smell nicer and stop it splashing as much (anti-foaming agent) so us poor ladies don’t have to worry our pretty little heads about getting it on our dainty hands or the smell offending our delicate sensibilities. Can you tell that this reasoning offended my not-so-delicate sensibilities?
The translation here is that we are paying extra for a diluted fuel that will give us fewer kilometres per tank and possibly isn’t ideal for the engine life either. So I make sure to fill up at the truck pumps. I save a couple of cents per liter upfront and I get more kms per tank, which is much better for Mother Earth. If they try and stop me, you’ll all hear me yelling about discrimination against car drivers.
Having said that, truck pumps are hi-flow. This means the nozzle is bigger on the pump to allow more fuel through faster. Yay for spending less time at the petrol station but this means your car must be able to take a hi-flow nozzle. Check this out before you try and fill up at the truck pump or you’ll just end up giving yourself and your car a diesel shower.
Wheeling and dealing
Keeping your tyres pumped up to the right pressure makes a difference to your fuel consumption. Having your tyres at the right pressure can save you a decent amount of cash over the course of a year on fuel as well as extending the life of your tyres! This is most definitely a win/win for you and Mother Earth.
Your car’s owner’s manual should have a table that tells you what pressure your front and back tyres should be. If you can’t find your manual, there’s really no excuse because Google has the instructions for everything ever.
Getting your car serviced regularly by a reputable mechanic will help keep things in peak condition and extend the life of your car and its parts. FYI You don’t have to take your car to the manufacturer for servicing to maintain your warranty. Most mechanics can perform a log book service for you and many of the independents are significantly cheaper than dealerships. Find someone you can trust (recommendations are always good) and take your car in on the recommended schedule.
Stay Nude
Every accessory you add to your car increases wind resistance. Every extra bit of wind resistance increases the amount of fuel your car uses to move you around. Take off unused or unnecessary accessories and save yourself some cash by saving fuel (and therefore preserving earth’s resources).
I am guilty of owning a very environmentally unfriendly car that is big and wind resistant already. Then I added roof racks. To make matters worse, once summer was over and I didn’t need to cart kayaks around for a while, I didn’t take them off because…well….life. I just kept forgetting. I reckon this has cost me about 50kms per tank of fuel and a very guilty conscience for being a bit of a hypocrite. I have taken them off now!
The same can be said for unneeded things in the car that add weight. Increased weight also means increased fuel consumption. Empty your boot or back seat and don’t cart around things you don’t need to.
The bottom line
Like I said earlier, these things may only make a dollar or two difference to you a week, but collectively, we can make a big difference for the planet! Plus think about what you could do with $52. That’s about the right amount of money to buy 15 trees. It just so happens that planting 15 trees a year is about the right amount to offset your car’s carbon footprint for that year. Winning!
What’s New and Improved About Sphagnum Moss & Sanazone?
First and most importantly, the Improved Sphagnum Moss & Sanazone Disinfectants do the same job and smell the same way. You won’t notice any changes.
The original Sanazone and Sphagnum Moss we all know and love had an active ingredient in them called….Sphagnum Moss! Tri Nature have a very strict policy around where they source their ingredients. There are a number of boxes that must be ticked including that the ingredients must come from sustainable plantations and ethical suppliers (people who treat their workers fairly, are not causing destruction to the environment, etc.).
There has only been one supplier of Sphagnum Moss who met this criteria. Unfortunately, in recent times, it seems this has changed. Tri Nature decided that they would rethink the product rather than compromise on their ingredients.
It turns out that Sphagnum Moss was so awesome at its job of disinfecting that it had to be replaced with not one, but THREE ingredients. The combination of Oregano, Rosemary and Thyme have replaced Sphag Moss as the active ingredient.
Oregano, Rosemary and Thyme extracts are well known for their potent antimicrobial benefits and have been combined synergistically to boost antimicrobial performance.
Oregano, although a widely recognized herb used in Mediterranean cuisine, and was traditionally used as an antiseptic.
Thyme has been used in traditional medicine to treat both infection and inflammation.
Rosemary herbal extracts are known for providing antioxidant protection.
So Sanazone and Sphagnum Moss, no longer actually contain Sphagnum Moss, but other than that, they are the same fantastic products!
The NEW part of New and Improved is that there is now Sanazone in Lemon Myrtle as well as odourless. So you can have Spearmint and Musk, Lemon Myrtle, Odourless, or add your own essential oils to the odourless for you personalised Disinfectant!
Eco Hot Water for reducing your electricity bill and greening your home or business
We have 2 enourmous hot water tanks at home. We have a long house with 2 bathrooms so there’s a separate hot water service for each bathroom. Both hot water tanks are 305L and they are both electric, set to heat up during off-peak hours (overnight) every night.
Solar
I looked into replacing them with solar hot water services. We have more than ample roof space that is perfectly positioned to capture the maximum amount of sun. Unfortunately, the cost was prohibitive. On top of everything else needing our cash, we just couldn’t afford the investment into solar right now.
Gas
We only really use the second bathroom on weekends (when we have 2 to 4 extra kids) so our next option was an instant hot water service. This only heats the hot water as you are using it, rather than every night regardless of consumption. By all accounts, not really any cheaper if you are using the hot water all the time, but if it’s occasional use, it can make a big difference.
The only other appliance in this house on gas is the heating. It turns out that the gas is only plumbed from the street to one side of the house. To run the gas line around, over or through the house so that it could supply gas to the instant hot water unit was going to cost an additional $5k. This ruled out option 2.
Turn it off
For the last few years, we have gone with option 3, which was to turn off the hot water service to the second bathroom. This has meant no hot water in the laundry either but that’s not really a deal breaker. The washing machine heats its own water and if I needed any for soaking, I ran up the hallway to the other bathroom with a bucket. Annoying but a first world problem.
This saved us between $200 and $300 PER QUARTER on our electricity bill! I was gobsmacked.
Heat Pump
One night Mark heard an ad on TV for a business called Chromagen and told me about it. I looked into it and they supply a hot water service called a heat pump. This unit takes the air from around it and somehow uses it to reduce the amount of electricity it needs to heat the water inside it by up to 75%. On top of that, the government was offering a rebate for switching, so the switch would cost nothing.
Naturally I was skeptical. However, having the second service meant we had the luxury of being able to experiment. I had concerns that the heat pump tank wouldn’t be big enough to cope with the demand but it heats up several times during the day so the smaller tank can still cope with the higher demand.
In the end, we just decided to give it a go. We had the second service replaced just before winter. I have been waiting and waiting to get my first electricity bill that covered a full quarter with the heat pump installed as I was still highly skeptical about the advertised savings.
Last week we got the bill. It was roughly $50 more than usual. So I had hot water in my laundry and the second bathroom for an additional $50 per quarter, instead of the usual $200 to $300! This was through a cold winter quarter, when you would expect it to be at its most expensive.
Needless to say that I have now arranged for the main hot water service to also be replaced. The government rebate has reduced, so this time there’s a $100 charge, but that’s all.
Google tells me that a common issue with the heat pump services (and this is not specific to the brand that Chromagen supplied but it seems to be general feedback across a range of brands) is that the heat pump needs replacing after roughly 8 years. In that time, with 2 services switched over, I will have saved, conservatively, just shy of $10k on electricity, plus interest.
Happy dance!!
I can’t see the replacement pumps costing $10k. Hopefully by then, I will be in a position to install solar hot water anyway!
The heat pump is great to replace external electric hot water services and is suitable for domestic or small business use. I highly recommend giving it a look if you are looking to improve your eco footprint and reduce your energy bill.
Coming out of the Maze of Information
COMING OUT OF THE MAZE OF INFORMATION
By Brian McLean (Tri Nature’s chemist)
It would be fair to say that, over the years, people concerned with natural lifestyles, environmental degradation and consumer health and safety have been exposed to a mass of opinion and conjecture about what is and is not ‘natural’. Over time, the focus has expanded somewhat to include what is and is not safe, toxic, irritant, mutagenic, carcinogenic, biodegradable, organic … you get the picture.
So how does one discern good information from ‘misinformation’; research facts from research fiction or fictional research; credible and helpful guidelines from self-serving propaganda? How can we be sure that claims we see on labels or in a product marketing ‘spiel’ are what we get? And what about those long lists of chemical sounding names that we find in small print on the packaging of our intended ‘natural’ purchases?
Let’s just step aside from all the questions for a moment – we will get to them in this and the next issue – and have some fun with a little consumer quiz to test your already established knowledge or beliefs.
Below is a list of chemical components that have been isolated from a common household shopping list item. Based on what you’ve read, heard or researched, take a pen or highlighter and mark all the names you consider could be harmful to your health or to the environment. Underline the ones that you think could be particularly nasty.
Diethyl Succinate, Estragole, Ethyl Acetate, Ethyl Butyrate, Ethyl Osobutyrate, Ethyl Decanoate, Ethyl Caproate, Ethyl Laurate, Ethyl 2-Methylbutyrate, Ethyl Propionate, Ethyl Isovalerate, Geraniol, Heptanal, Heptyl Acetate, Heptyl Alcohol, Gamma Hexalacetone, Hexanal, Hexanoic Acid, 2-Hexanal2-Hexen-1-ol, 3-Hexen-1-o1, Trans 2 – Hexenyl Acetate, Hexyl Acetate, Hexyl Alcohol, Hexyl Buturate, Methyl Isobutyrate, Methyl Hexanoate, Methyl Laurate, Methyl Myristate, Methyl Octanoate, Nonyl Alcohol, Octanoic Acid, 1-Octanol, Octyl Acetate, 2-Pentanone, Phenethyl Acetate, Phenthyl Alcohol, Propionaldehyde, Propyl Acetate, Propyl Alcohol, Iso Propyl Alcohol, Propyl Butyrate, Propyl Hexanoate, Propyl Propionate, Alpha Terpineol, Valeraldehyde, Valeric Acid, Cis-3-Hexanyl Acetate, Hexyl Isobutyrate, 2-Nonanol, 2-Pentanol, Acetone, n-Butyl Methylbutyrate, 3-Octanol, Linaloon Oxide, 2-Butanol, Acetaldehyde, Actoin, Iso Amyl Acetate,
I-Pentanol, Iso Amyl Alcohol, Amyl Butyrate, Iso Amyl Butyrate, Iso Amyl Hexanoate, Amyl Octanoate, Iso Amyl Octanoate, Benzaldehyde, Benzyl Alcohol, 2-Butanone, Butyl Acetate, Iso Butyl Alcohol, Butyl Butyrate, Butyl Iso Butyrate, Butyl Formate, Butyl Heptanoate, Butyl Laurate, Butyl Propionate, Butyl Aldehyde, Iso Butyl Aldehyde, Butyric Acid, 4-Carvomentenol & Decanol.Okay – what do you think this mystery item could be? The answer is over the page, of course, but no peeking until you’ve finished the quiz.
And here’s the answer. All of the ‘ingredients’ in the long list of suspicious sounding names on the previous page are present in none other than the humble (or heroic, depending on your view) Granny Smith apple!
It’s time to take an honest look at what one can realistically expect from products produced by genuinely concerned, ethical manufacturers. Let me preface any discussion we may have by quashing the idea that any cleaning or personal care product that we use is natural, contains only natural ingredients or indeed contains any natural ingredient.
Let us also be clear that there is no such thing as ‘chemical free’. Free of petro- or synthetic chemicals maybe, but not free of chemicals. Everything on earth is 100% chemical. All of you, all of me, all of a Granny Smith apple – yes, entirely composed of chemicals! Strictly speaking, anything that comes from nature is only truly ‘natural’ in its whole form.
I guess the most natural ingredients that you can get (apart from rainwater) are cold pressed oils. Even though the prepared and cleaned up oil is not present in nature, I will accept its ‘naturalness’. However, the vast majority of trees, fruits, plants and herbs do not give of their precious oils when they are cold and squashed. They require the extra persuasion of heat and solvents to effect an efficient release of their treasures. Hardly a natural process … and from there everything gets decidedly ‘unnatural’!
Any surfactant (detergent agent) or emulsifier used in any specialty household or personal care product has gone through a variety of ‘chemical processes’, most of which are complex and all of which can be scary to the uninitiated. Etherification, sulphation, sulphonation, ethoxylation, ammonisation and neutralisation are just a few examples of such processes.
None of the resultant detergent ingredients are ‘natural’. The best that we can say is that these raw materials are based on renewable vegetable resources. This may be distressing for some people to read – but it need not be, if you come to understand the difference between safe and harmful substances, rather than relying on the ‘natural’ tag to determine the wisdom of your buying decisions.
As many of you know, my company, Tri Nature Pty Ltd, has been highly proactive in the removal of harmful ingredients and processes in the manufacture of cleaning and personal care products since the early 1980s. We have labeled our approach ‘the art of gentle chemistry’.
We are not in the practice of maligning other ‘natural’ product manufacturers, their merchandise or ingredients in an effort to ‘push’ our own. Nor are we of the blinkered belief that if we don’t use a particular ingredient, we should find some obscure reason why it’s harmful in order to make those that do use it look ‘bad’.
This article is an introduction to a practical set of guidelines for the ‘natural living’ shopper, to be published in the Spring edition of New Vegetarian and Natural Health. Given our revealing Granny Smith exercise, it makes sense first to touch on the use of ‘chemical’ names with a couple of examples presenting difficulties that a good PR person would need to overcome in the marketing of a product!
What’s in a name?
Terms like propyl, butyl, octyl and lauryl throw fear into many people because of inaccurate and irresponsible reporting by some members of our industry. You may be surprised to learn that each of these terms is only a prefix that designates a number. Propyl = 3, butyl = 4, octyl = 8 and lauryl = 12. They are in fact just the technical identification of the carbon chain length in a chemical compound – and all of them (exemplified by our Granny Smith apple) are prolific in nature.
I have heard that, because propylene glycol is such a dangerous product, the world should be wary of anything with a ‘prop’ in it. That is just ridiculous. Any danger that propylene glycol may pose has been highly exaggerated (which is not to say that Tri Nature uses it) and to link it to any other compound with a three carbon chain in its structure displays a complete lack of knowledge (or a very passionate commitment to misinformation).
Second example: phenol is an extremely dangerous and highly toxic organic acid derived from coal tar – yet the catechin compounds that are the active principles of green tea (and considered to be some of the most powerful antioxidant compounds known) are all polyphenols.
Let us not be fearful of the complexity in the way science has chosen to name nature’s compounds. Let us become familiar with them and ‘demystify’ them. They are only names. You may not like the name Archibald, but it doesn’t mean that Archie isn’t a very fine fellow.
In the next issue, we will look at specific ingredients, chemicals and processes that generally cause concern. Some ingredients that are commonly listed by their ‘natural’ names for marketing benefit will also be unmasked … just a few small first steps towards helping you out of the ‘maze of misinformation’.
Final text submitted for publication in the Winter 2003 issue of – New Vegetarian and Natural Health