In 2012, the North Sea Foundation and the
Plastic Soup Foundation launched an
app allowing Dutch consumers to check whether personal care products contain microbeads. In the summer of 2013, the
United Nations Environment Programme and UK-based NGO
Fauna and Flora International joined the partnership to further develop the app for international audiences. The app has enjoyed success, convincing a number of large multinationals to stop using microbeads, and is available in seven languages. There are many natural and biodegradable alternatives to microbeads that have no environmental impact when washed down the drain, as they will either
decompose or get filtered out before being released into the natural environment. Some examples to use as natural exfoliates include ground-up almonds, oatmeal, sea salt, and coconut husks.
Burt's Bees and St. Ives use apricot pits and cocoa husks in its products instead of microbeads to reduce their negative environmental impact. Due to the increase in bans of microbeads in the United States, many cosmetic companies had also been phasing out microbeads from their production lines.
L'Oréal had phased out polyethylene microbeads in the exfoliates, cleansers and shower gels from its products by 2017.
Johnson and Johnson, who had already started to phase out microbeads at the end of 2015, had stopped producing polyethylene microbeads in their products by 2017. Lastly, Crest had phased out microbeads in its toothpastes in the U.S. by February 2016, and globally by 2017. The following countries have taken action towards ban on microbeads.
Australia In 2016, the federal and state governments agreed to support a voluntary industry phase-out of microbeads in rinse-off personal care, cosmetic, and cleaning products. An independent assessment in 2020 found that more than 99% of products it inspected were microbead-free. The New South Wales state government banned the supply of rinse-off personal care products containing microbeads, effective from 1 November 2022.
Canada On May 18, 2015, Canada took its first steps toward banning microbeads when a Member of Parliament from Toronto,
John McKay, introduced Bill C-680, which would ban the sale of microbeads. The first Canadian province to take action against microbeads was Ontario, where Maire-France Lalonde, a Member of the Provincial Parliament, introduced the Microbead Elimination and Monitoring Act. This bill enforced the ban of manufacturing microbeads in cosmetics, facial scrubs or washes, and similar products. The bill also proposed that there would be yearly samples taken from the Canadian Great Lakes, which would be analyzed for traces of microbeads.
Megan Leslie, Halifax Member of Parliament, presented a motion against microbeads in the
House of Commons, which received "unanimous support" and was hoping for them to be listed under the Canadian Environmental Protection Act as a toxin. On June 29, 2016, the Federal Government of Canada added microbeads in the Canadian Environmental Protection Act under Schedule 1 as a toxic substance. The import or manufacture of toiletries containing microbeads was banned on January 1, 2018, and sales were banned from July 1, 2018. Microbeads in natural health products and non-prescription drugs were also banned in 2019. In June 2019, Coveney's successor
Eoghan Murphy introduced the Microbeads (Prohibition) Bill 2019, which would ban manufacture, sale, and export of rinse-off microbead products. The government also intends to include microbeads when updating the law on preventing marine pollution. Microbeads were banned in February 2020.
State Secretary for
Infrastructure and the Environment Mansveld has said she is pleased with the progress made by the members of the Nederlandse Cosmetica Vereniging (NCV), the Dutch trade organisation for producers and importers of cosmetics, who have ceased using microbeads or are working towards removing microbeads from their product. Among the NCV's members are large multinationals such as
Unilever,
L'Oréal,
Colgate-Palmolive,
Henkel, and
Johnson & Johnson.
South Africa A ban on microbeads has been proposed in South Africa after microplastic pollution was found in
tap water.
United Kingdom The British government has banned the production of microbeads in rinse-off cosmetics and cleaning products in England effective 9 January 2018, followed by a sales ban on 19 June 2018. Scotland introduced its own manufacture and sales ban on the same day The ban was extended to Northern Ireland from 11 March 2019.
United States National At the federal level, the
Microbead-Free Waters Act of 2015 prohibits the manufacture and introduction into interstate commerce of rinse-off cosmetics containing intentionally added plastic microbeads by July 1, 2017. Representative
Frank Pallone proposed the bill in 2014 (H.R. 4895, reintroduced in 2015 as H.R. 1321). On December 7, 2015, his proposal was narrowed by amendment to rinse-off cosmetics, and passed unanimously by the
House. The
American Chemistry Council and other industry groups supported the final bill, which the
Senate passed on December 18, 2015, and the president signed on December 28, 2015..
States Illinois became the first U.S. state to enact legislation banning the manufacture and sale of products containing microbeads; the two-part ban went into effect in 2018 and 2019. The
Personal Care Products Council, a trade group for the cosmetics industry, came out in support of the Illinois bill. Other states have followed. , all state bans except California's ban, had allowed biodegradable microbeads. In 2014, legislation was voted on but failed to pass in New York.
Local In 2015,
Erie County, New York, passed the first local ban in the state of New York. It banned the sale and distribution of all plastic microbeads (including biodegradable ones) including from personal care products. , its prohibition on sales was stronger than any other law in the country. It was enacted on August 12, 2015, and took effect in February 2016. In November 2015, four other NY counties followed suit. ==See also==