Pentesodium pentetate is a chelating agent that helps with lathering in hard water. It has been used in a variety of soaps, shampoos, and other cosmetics.
Effective today, December 1, 2023, the EU has banned the use of this chemical. It is not currently banned in the UK or USA. While I cannot guess as to whether use will be banned elsewhere, I have read that some experts have concluded that when used topically, the chemical does not penetrate the skin and poses minimal risk. If you read the EU information, they rate the chelating agent as category 1B which means that it is a "Presumed to have carcinogenic potential for humans - largely based on animal evidence." Typically, that type of statement means that injecting the chemical into lab rats causes cancer in a significant percentage of subjects. If there was evidence that is causes cancer in humans, it would be rated 1A.
I have read that Tetrasodium Iminodisuccinate is being used by some manufacturers as a replacement for pentasodium pentetate.
Tobacco smoke contains at least 70 chemicals known to cause cancer in humans. While smoking is banned in many public places in many countries, I know of no country that has an outright ban on the sale and use of tobacco.
If you have products that contain pentesodium pentetate, you will need to determine whether to dispose of them or continue using them. I checked the over 200 shave soaps in my den and found that the following contain the ingredient recently banned in the EU. Those soaps were: Art of Shaving sandalwood, DR Harris Windsor, Pre de Provence No. 63, sand Williams Mug Soap. None of these soaps is good enough to warrant inclusion in my current rotation, so they will all be tossed.
Matsilainen,
keto and
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