Friday, November 14, 2025

Bluewashed: How The Beauty Industry Sold An Ocean-Friendly Illusion – Analysis



November 15, 2025 
By Kate Petty


As consumers flock to “reef-safe” and “ocean-friendly” skincare, beauty brands are selling a vision of ocean purity that is more marketing-driven than science-based.

The personal care industry has mastered the art of marketing eco-consciousness— evolving beyond familiar labels like “green,” “clean,” and “natural”—into a new wave of sea-inspired branding that claims to champion ocean conservation.

Terms such as “reef-safe” and “ocean-friendly” evoke images of crystalline waters and thriving coral reefs, yet behind the glossy marketing lies a regulatory murk. With no federal standards or clear definitions, consumers are left to navigate a tide of misleading labels.

As “ocean-safe” products flood the market—wrapped in teal hues and marine motifs—the illusion of ecological responsibility is gaining momentum, but it’s worth asking whether these gestures represent genuine sustainability or merely performative eco-branding.

Lorraine Dallmeier, CEO of Formula Botanica, warns that when sustainability becomes a marketing function, images can eclipse impact. “[M]arketing tells stories, it connects us with people, it builds communities, it grows businesses,” she says during the episode, “When Sustainability Reports to Marketing—Beauty’s Uncomfortable Truth,” on her Green Beauty Conversations podcast. “But when sustainability reports to marketing, we start prioritizing optics over action.”

The Critical Role of Coral Reefs in Supporting Biodiversity


Coral reefs are among the most biologically diverse ecosystems on Earth—hosting more than 25 percent of all marine species despite occupying less than 1 percent of the ocean floor, according to the Coral Reef Alliance.

The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) categorizes coral reefs as essential habitats, acting as nurseries and spawning grounds for countless fish species, crustaceans, mollusks, and marine food webs. According to the MIT Science Policy Review, coral reefs deliver substantial economic and cultural benefits—through fisheries, tourism, recreation, and even pharmaceutical discoveries—worth trillions of dollars globally.

The initial swell in ocean-centric marketing followed Hawaii’s 2018 ban on sunscreens containing oxybenzone and octinoxate—chemicals that filter ultraviolet (UV) radiation, which are harmful to ocean ecosystems.

The bill was informed by a 2015 study published in the Archives of Environmental Contamination and Toxicology, which examined how chemical sunscreens can damage coral larvae and cells, causing coral bleaching, making them vulnerable to infection, and preventing them from getting the nutrients needed for survival. The study found that “the chemicals cause bleaching, deformities, DNA damage, and ultimately death in coral when they’re washed off beachgoers or discharged into wastewater treatment plants and deposited into bodies of water,” states a CNN article.

The Hawaii legislation represented a watershed moment in environmental regulation, drawing global attention to the hidden ecological costs of UV chemical filters and inspiring other nations, such as the U.S. Virgin Islands, Palau, Aruba, and Thailand, to adopt similar restrictions to protect ocean life.

While the chemical impact of sunscreens on marine environments is well-documented, critics argue that the personal care product (PCP) industry doesn’t always honor the principles of the 2018 legislation passed by Hawaii.

How the Chemicals in Sunscreen Are Harming Ocean Life

According to a 2023 National Geographic article, “14,000 tons of sunscreen are thought to wash into the oceans each year,” and 82,000 chemicals from PCPs are found in the seas.

In a 2022 study, scientists from Stanford University revealed that animals process oxybenzone and UV radiation differently than humans; their metabolic systems alter the molecule in ways that make it reactive under sunlight, producing harmful reactive oxygen species that damage cells.

“The way sunscreens work is they chemically occlude the sun,” said oceanographer and educator David Hastings in an interview for this article. “And if you’re a coral trying to make a living by photosynthesizing, your symbiotic algae are sitting there, dying for the light.”

Even mineral sunscreens marketed as “reef-safe” can pose risks to ocean ecosystems under certain conditions. While they avoid chemical UV filters, many products contain zinc oxide or titanium dioxide, which are manufactured as nanoparticles. Due to their small size, these nanoparticles can bypass water treatment systems and bioaccumulate in marine organisms, according to a 2018 study published in Science of The Total Environment.

“Current research has only scratched the surface of understanding how these chemicals can affect marine life,” notes lead author of a 2025 report, Anneliese Hodge, PhD researcher at Plymouth Marine Laboratory and the University of Plymouth. “What’s particularly concerning is that these compounds are considered ‘pseudo-persistent pollutants’ due to their continuous introduction into marine environments as well as an overall lack of understanding of how they then interact with others in the sea.”

PCPs expose aquatic environments to various chemicals, including synthetic polymers, microplastics, siloxanes, and parabens.

Notably, microplastics—or microbeads—in facial scrubs and body washes have become one of the most visible examples of hidden plastic pollution; marine organisms—from plankton to fish—ingest the tiny plastic particles, which leads to oxidative stress, endocrine disruption, reduced growth, and altered behavior, according to a 2022 study published in Frontiers in Environmental Science.

Scientists warn that claims about “biodegradable” or “organic” microbeads made from plant starches, cellulose, or bioplastics such as polylactic acid can be misleading. Once released into the environment, these materials behave much like conventional plastics: They do not dissolve or readily break down in water and instead accumulate in rivers and oceans, according to the United Nations Environment Program.

The Business of ‘Bluewashing’

While sunscreens exposed the problem, chemical hazards extend across the spectrum of personal care products, and the industry’s growth only magnifies the stakes. Valued at $54.36 billion in 2024, the PCP market is projected to reach $90.40 billion by 2032, according to figures provided by Fortune Business Insights for 2025.

Although the overall personal care sector grew by a modest 2 percent in 2021, sales of “clean” beauty products jumped 8.1 percent, with items free of parabens, sulfates, and phthalates showing the most substantial gains at 13 percent, according to data from global marketing research firm NielsenIQ.

This shift in consumer behavior is reinforced by a 2020 McKinsey & Company survey, which found that between 60 percent and 70 percent of U.S. consumers are willing to pay more for products with sustainable packaging. Other research indicates that 68 percent will pay extra for items that specifically promote commitments to ocean conservation.

According to a CivicScience report, based on responses from April 2024, nearly 70 percent of beauty shoppers under the age of 35 are willing to spend more on sustainable personal care products, compared to 30-40 percent of older adults.

To reach this demographic, PCP brands are leveraging social media platforms—particularly Instagram, TikTok, and YouTube—where sustainability messaging, influencer collaborations, and user-generated content drive engagement. On Instagram, for instance, brands frequently pair ocean-inspired visuals with hashtags like #BlueBeauty, #SustainableSkincare, and #CleanBeauty, positioning their products within an aspirational lifestyle of environmental mindfulness.

Scrutinizing Sustainability Claims

“Brands often begin by crafting a beautiful narrative, claims about packaging, ingredients, and impact, and they do that long before they’ve necessarily built the internal infrastructure to measure or manage any of it,” notes Formula Botanica’s Dallmeier, adding, “It’s then treated as a message, not a methodology.”

This can be particularly problematic in the complex realm of sustainable sourcing, which encompasses not only the origins of raw materials but also the environmental, social, and ethical impacts embedded throughout the supply chain—from harvesting and processing to labor practices and traceability.

“[Some brands] mislead consumers with words that are a simplification of concepts that aren’t simple,” says Adrien Dissous, senior vice president of Babo Botanicals. Dissous notes that the science is evolving, and while terms like “reef-safe” may come from good intentions, they can give the false impression that a product has no impact on ocean environments.

“We hear claims about sustainable palm oil, sustainable mica, and sustainable plastic,” says Dallmeier in her podcast series on sustainable beauty. “These are terms that don’t necessarily mean anything unless the systems behind them are robust, third-party verified, and transparently communicated,” she adds, emphasizing that deeper issues—such as whole life cycle, impact, carbon footprint, and marine ecosystem effect—rarely break through to consumers.

“Sustainable plastics are really a misnomer,” says Steven White, VP of Quality and Technical Services at iLabs, a PCP contract manufacturer, in an interview for this article. “You can start with something that is a plant-based material—such as corn starch or sugarcane—but it is often manipulated with enzymes and other catalysts to achieve a desired texture, color, or efficacy—converting it into a polymer.”

“A polymer is a plastic. So your material base may have been a plant, but you’re converting it into a plastic, which is persistent in the environment,” he explains.

White emphasizes the problematic disconnect between research and development (R&D) teams, contract manufacturers, and marketing departments: “We get a brief from the R&D side of the brand, but if they don’t have a brief from their marketing organization, the final product may not meet the claims the company is making,” he says.

“If sustainability is going to be meaningful, it has to be linked to R&D and operations,” says Dallmeier. “It has to be cross-functional, not preformative; otherwise, it’s just another campaign that gets treated as a content pillar, and then it lives in the slide deck, not in procurement systems or packaging briefs, and ultimately, it becomes just another way to convince people to buy more but feel better about it.”

‘Virtue Signaling’ and ‘Charity-Washing’

PCP brands increasingly tout partnerships that promote sustainable sourcing, marine restoration, corporate giving, and conservation events. While some of these initiatives may contribute to conservation efforts, critics caution that many amount to “virtue signaling” or “charity-washing,” where sustainability is treated as a seasonal campaign—timed for National Ocean Month or Earth Day or tied to a new product launch—rather than being fully integrated into a company’s operations.

“[Corporations]… may contribute some small (but very visible) amount of money toward the solution for a problem that they themselves have contributed to in the hunt for outsize profits,” writer Paul Constant observed in a 2019 Business Insider article about corporate philanthropic campaigns, adding, “The glow of philanthropic giving obscures the exponential wealth that the corporation draws from the situation they’re ostensibly trying to solve. It is, literally, throwing good money after bad.”

Leaders of the PCP industry have invested heavily in ocean conservation initiatives. For example, beauty brand L’Oréal partners with the Great Barrier Reef Foundation through the L’Oréal Fund for Nature Regeneration. Estée Lauder has established the La Mer Blue Heart Ocean Fund, and Shiseido stewards the Shiseido Blue Project in association with World Surf League (WSL) and WSL’s environmental initiative PURE.


Lack of Regulation in Marine-Safe Labeling in the U.S.

In the United States, there are no federal standards or certifications to ensure that “ocean-safe” claims are accurate or meaningful. At the federal level, the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) and the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) provide some oversight. The FDA regulates the efficacy and safety of sunscreens for humans, while the EPA evaluates the environmental impacts of certain chemicals under broader statutes; it doesn’t enforce ocean-centric marketing language.

In recent years, the U.S. Federal Trade Commission (FTC) has signaled an increased scrutiny of environmental claims in the personal care sector through updates to its Green Guides, clarifying terms such as “biodegradable” and “non-toxic.” However, some academic law journalsargue that the guides remain vague and non-binding, resulting in limited enforcement and accountability.

At the state level, there are regulatory actions that are more prescriptive. In 2020, California enacted the Toxic-Free Cosmetics Act, which bans 24 ingredients, including formaldehyde, parabens, and mercury. In 2024, New York adopted regulations to reduce the presence of 1,4-dioxane—a byproduct of ethoxylated surfactants used in shampoos, body washes, and cosmetics.

Nonetheless, allegations of misleading claims have made their way to the courtroom. Edgewell Personal Care, the parent company of Banana Boat and Hawaiian Tropic, faced legal action in Australia in 2025 for falsely labeling these products as “reef-friendly” when, in fact, they contained chemicals harmful to marine life. Target faced a class action suit for deceptively marketing its private label up&up sunscreens as safe for coral reefs in 2024, and the Santa Clara District Attorney’s Office secured settlements with Sun Bum and Supergoop in 2024 for misleading labeling as reef-safe.” In October 2020, Tropical Seas, Inc. agreed to a settlement after the Sonoma County DA’s office (alongside 21 other California district attorneys) found that the company’s “reef-safe” sunscreens could not substantiate that claim.

Ensuring Standards That Guarantee Sustainability

Private certifiers have become the de facto regulators of the PCP industry—issuing seals and logos that signal ethical sourcing, cruelty-free practices, and environmental responsibility. However, they also represent a commercial ecosystem of their own—brands must pay for audits, renewals, and logo-licensing fees that can range from a few hundred to several thousand dollars, depending on the company’s size and sales volume, according to the organization Truth and Advertising.

These certifications provide valuable shorthand for consumers seeking assurance in a crowded marketplace, but the payment structure underscores a built-in tension: Brands fund the very entities that verify them.

Among the most globally recognized standards ensuring that products meet strict requirements for ingredient sourcing, manufacturing processes, and environmental impact are COSMOS Organic and Ecocert. The Environmental Working Group’s EWG Verified mark similarly signals that a product is free from EWG’s chemicals of concern and meets stringent health and transparency standards. The Green Seal GS-50 standard certifies personal care products that are low in volatile organic compounds (VOCs), biodegradable, and free from carcinogens, mutagens, and reproductive toxins, protecting both human and environmental health.

“While conscious consumer behavior plays a vital role, corporate commitments and innovation investments will shape the future,” says Marc Desmarais, a product development activist at Origin by Ocean.

Dallmeier adds, “It’s no longer enough for sustainability to sound good. It has to be good, even when nobody’s looking.”


Author Bio: Kate Petty is an educator, writer, and environmental activist. She has worked with the New York Nature Conservancy and various United Nations initiatives, including UNICEF, the World Association of Non-Governmental Organizations, and the Universal Versatile Society to promote education, social justice, and solution-oriented projects for a healthier planet. She is a contributor to the Observatory.


Credit Line: This article was produced by Earth | Food | Life, a project of the Independent Media Institute.


Tribes And Environmental Groups Sue To Stop Road Planned For Alaska Wildlife Refuge



Brant fly over the water at Izembek Lagoon in Izembek National Wildlife Refuge. The refuge supports the entire Pacific population of black brant, a species of goose. (Photo by Kristine Sowl/U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service)


November 15, 2025 
Alaska Beacon
By Yereth Rosen

(Alaska Beacon) — Three tribal governments and several environmental groups sued the Trump administration on Wednesday to try to block a land trade that would allow a road to be built through a national wildlife refuge in southwestern Alaska.

The land swap, approved by the U.S. Department of the Interior last month, would open up a section of the Izembek National Wildlife Refuge.

Supporters argue that the road is needed to connect the community of King Cove, home to about 750 people, with a legacy military airstrip that can accommodate jets. That would give King Cove’s residents access to safer medical evacuations if needed. Opponents say the proposed road — to run 18.9 miles in total, most of that within what is currently refuge land — would damage world-class bird habitat that is in the heart of the refuge.

Wednesday’s challenges came in three lawsuits filed in U.S. District Court in Anchorage. All assert that the land trade and road development pose dire threats to migratory bird populations that use Izembek’s wetlands, including species with Endangered Species Act listings, and to the wider ecosystem. All say the trade and planned road violate the Alaska National Interest Lands Conservation Act and other federal laws.

The three lawsuits have their individual characteristics as well.

One of them, filed by tribal governments in the Yukon-Kuskokwim Delta villages, focuses on threats to traditional subsistence hunters who depend on the birds that use Izembek’s wetlands. The tribal plaintiffs are the Native Village of Paimiut, Native Village of Hooper Bay and Chevak Native Village.

“Izembek’s eelgrass wetlands are a lifeline for emperor geese, black brant and other birds that feed our families and connect us to Indigenous relatives across the Pacific,” Angutekaraq Estelle Thomson, traditional council president of the Native Village of Paimiut, said in a statement. “Trading away this globally important refuge for a commercial corridor devalues our lives and our children’s future. We are joining this lawsuit because defending Izembek is inseparable from defending our subsistence rights, our food security and our ability to remain Yup’ik on our own lands.”

The Center for Biological Diversity, an environmental organization, is also a plaintiff in the case.

A second lawsuit, filed by Friends of Alaska National Wildlife Refuges, Wilderness Watch, the Alaska Wilderness League and the Sierra Club, puts a special focus on the process used to achieve the land swap and what it may mean for all wildlife refuges.

“Trading the ownership of refuge lands that Congress designated for conservation is a terrible precedent for the privatization of public lands. Building a road will have tremendous impacts on fish and wildlife habitat and could also greatly increase both disturbance and sport hunting pressure on vulnerable species,” Marilyn Sigman, president of Friends of Alaska National Wildlife Refuges, said in a statement.

The third complaint, filed by Defenders of Wildlife, puts a focus on the wider environmental impacts.

The planned road enabled by the land trade would “result in incalculable and irreversible damage” to myriad wildlife species, including marine and land mammals as well as migratory birds, that lawsuit says. The lawsuit alleges that the land deal violates both the National Wildlife Refuge System Improvement Act and the federal Wilderness Act.

“Under the Trump administration, the Interior Secretary entered into an illegal deal done in the darkness of a government shutdown: a sellout of one of our country’s largest and most pristine wildlife refuges and wilderness areas,” Jane Davenport, a senior attorney in Defenders of Wildlife’s Biodiversity Law Center, said in a statement. “Our treasured public conservation lands belong to all Americans. Defenders of Wildlife will stand up in court to hold this administration to account for recklessly and unlawfully trading them away.”

The Izembek Lagoon area, where the road is planned, holds the largest single stand of eelgrass in the world and the largest bed of seagrass along the North American Pacific Coast, according to the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. The entire Pacific population of black brant, a type of goose, uses the refuge’s lagoon area, feeding on the eelgrass. The refuge and its eelgrass support several other bird and mammal species; about half the world’s emperor geese use the refuge as a migratory stopover, according to biologists.

A Department of the Interior spokesperson declined to comment Wednesday on the lawsuits.

Last month, however, Interior Secretary Doug Burgum touted the land exchange and planned road as long overdue.

He spoke about the project during an event called “Alaska Day,” a gathering in Washington with Gov. Mike Dunleavy and the state’s three-member congressional delegation. The Izembek land exchange was one of the pro-development Alaska actions announced at the event.

“It just seems preposterous to me that somehow, it’s taken 40 years for us to put people first,” Burgum said at the event. “Because I know one thing as a governor of a state: You can actually do things like build 18 miles of gravel road and still take great care of wildlife.” Burgum was North Dakota’s governor before being appointed as Interior secretary.

The land trade he approved would convey a little less than 500 acres of refuge land, most of it designated wilderness, to the Native-owned King Cove Corp. The corporation would give 1,739 acres of its land to the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service to be added to the refuge, and the federal government would also pay the corporation for the land.

The idea of a road linking King Cove to the World War II-era military runway at Cold Bay dates back decades. The legal and political battle over the proposal has also been long. Some of the plaintiffs in the new cases were plaintiffs in previous lawsuits over proposed land trades. The dispute was being considered by the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals, but that court in 2023 determined that the case was moot and dismissed it because the Biden administration was not pursuing the plan endorsed by the first Trump administration.

Alaska Beacon

Alaska Beacon is an independent, nonpartisan news organization focused on connecting Alaskans to their state government. Alaska, like many states, has seen a decline in the coverage of state news. We aim to reverse that.

Another Giveaway to Big Oil as Trump Wrenches Open 13 Million Acres of Arctic for Drilling


“The Trump administration is trying to take us back in time with its reckless fossil fuels agenda.”


Caribou and geese were pictured at Teshekpuk Lake in North Slope Borough, Alaska
(Photo by Bonnie Jo Mount/The Washington Post via Getty Images)

Jake Johnson
Nov 14, 2025
COMMON DREAMS

The Trump administration on Thursday killed Biden-era rules that protected around 13 million acres of the western Arctic from fossil fuel drilling, another giveaway to the industry that helped bankroll the president’s campaign.

The decision by the US Interior Department, led by billionaire fossil fuel industry ally Doug Burgum, targets the National Petroleum Reserve-Alaska (NPR-A). Last year, the Biden administration finalized rules that shielded more than half of the 23-million-acre NPR-A from drilling.


Even During Shutdown, Senate GOP Does Big Oil’s Bidding With Vote to Gut Arctic Protections


Conservationists were quick to condemn the repeal of the rules as a move that prioritizes the profits of oil and gas corporations over wildlife, pristine land, and the climate.

Monica Scherer, senior director of campaigns at Alaska Wilderness League, ripped the administration for ignoring the hundreds of thousands of people who engaged in the public comment process and spoke out against the gutting of NPR-A protections.

“Today’s actions make one thing painfully clear: this administration never had any intention of listening to the American people,” Scherer said Thursday. “By dismantling these protections, Interior isn’t ‘restoring common sense,’ it’s sidelining science and traditional knowledge, silencing communities, and putting irreplaceable lands and wildlife at risk.”

Earthjustice attorney Erik Grafe called the administration’s weakening of Arctic protections “another example of how the Trump administration is trying to take us back in time with its reckless fossil fuels agenda.”

“This would sweep aside common-sense regulations aimed at more responsibly managing the Western Arctic’s irreplaceable lands and wildlife for future generations,” said Grafe. “It rewinds the clock to regulations last updated in 1977. This is no way to secure our future.”

“Where others see the most ecologically intact landscape in the United States, the Interior Department sees another American treasure poised for ruination.”

Thursday’s move came less than a month after the Trump administration announced plans to open Alaska’s Arctic National Wildlife Refuge for drilling. At the time, Burgum declared, “Alaska is open for business.”

ConocoPhillips, the oil and gas giant behind the much-decried Willow project that the Biden administration approved in 2023, is among the possible beneficiaries of the Trump Interior Department’s decision to roll back drilling protections in the western Arctic.

Inside Climate News reported earlier this week that ConocoPhillips “has applied to extend ice roads and well pads farther west into the Arctic wilderness beyond its Willow oil project.”

“The company also wants to build roads to the south of Willow, where it would use heavy-duty equipment to thump the ground with seismic testing searching for crude,” the outlet added.

Bobby McEnaney, director of land conservation at the Natural Resources Defense Council, said Thursday that the Trump administration’s latest attack on Arctic protections “is nothing more than a giveaway to the oil and gas industry.”

“Weakening protections is reckless, and it threatens to erase the very landscapes Congress sought to safeguard,” said McEnaney. “Where others see the most ecologically intact landscape in the United States, the Interior Department sees another American treasure poised for ruination.”