Oeko-Tex Standard 100 The Standard 100 product label, introduced in 1992, certifies adherence to the specifications of the standard by the same name, a document of testing methods and limit values for potentially harmful chemicals.
Oeko-Tex Made in Green Made in Green is a label that certifies the testing of textile and leather products for harmful substances and materials, as well as evaluating environmental production and workplace safety. The Made in Green label replaced the former Oeko-Tex Standard 100plus label in 2015. The Made in Green label is valid for one year.
Oeko-Tex Eco Passport Eco Passport is a certification system through which producers of textile and leather processing chemicals and chemical compounds can corroborate that their products are suitable for sustainable textile and leather production. The program features three sequential assessments, and products that pass all three steps are granted the Eco Passport certification. This label allows for those products to be used in Standard 100-certified products and by STeP-certified manufacturing plants.
Oeko-Tex Leather Standard The Leather Standard (introduced 2017) is a system of testing methods, testing criteria and limit values for harmful substances used by the Oeko-Tex member institutes to globally certify the human-ecological safety of leather products: semi-finished leather materials ("Wet blue" – chrome-tanned hides, "
Wet white" – vegetable tanned hides), leather,
bonded leather and ready-made leather articles. When certifying leather products contain non-leather (e.g. textile or metallic) components, the requirements of the Leather Standard are combined with those of the Standard 100. Certification according to the Leather Standard is valid for one year. The Leather Standard defines the same four product classes as the Standard 100. Both also employ very similar catalogues of limit values for potentially harmful chemicals.
Oeko-Tex Organic Cotton Fashion and textile products with the Organic Cotton label are made with organic cotton, grown without
GMOs (genetically modified organisms) or pesticides, and were tested for other harmful substances. For the label, Oeko-Tex developed a method that can test quantitatively for genetically modified organisms. For verification of organic origin, Oeko-Tex’s GMO quantification method differentiates between contamination and purposeful mixing of conventional cotton. The certification works in compliance with several regulations including EU REACH Annex XIV and XVII,
US CPSIA (lead) and
EU POP regulation. ==Institutes==