Colgate Committed To Finding Non-Animal Methods For Testing Oral Care
This article was originally published in The Rose Sheet
Executive Summary
Colgate-Palmolive says it is committed to reducing animal testing for its oral-care products and is working with other stakeholders to find alternative strategies
You may also be interested in...
Major U.S. Cosmetic Firms Say They Are Ready For Animal Test Ban In EU
The EU's upcoming ban on products tested on animals could affect the availability of some novel cosmetic ingredients, though it is unlikely to have a jarring impact on large U.S. personal-care marketers
E.l.f. Facing Off Against Beauty Giants: Third Among Mass Market Brands As Sales Jump 78%
E.l.f. cosmetics climbed to No. 3 brand in US mass market cosmetics, up two slots from a year ago as it surpassed Revlon and CoverGirl. In its recent sales and earnings presentation, it announced sales in its fiscal 2023 fourth quarter jumped 78%.
Cosmetics Industry’s Preservatives Crisis Grows More Dire Under New Washington State Law
Washington State Governor Jay Inslee signed into law HB 1047 on 15 May, implementing the most aggressive cosmetics ingredient ban in the country. The Personal Care Products Council and Independent Beauty Association are concerned about a lack of alternative preservatives to replace targeted formaldehyde-releasing substances effectively and affordably and the law’s inconsistency with FDA over lead levels, among other impacts.