The laundry eggs contain no nasty chemicals or controversial ingredients such as chlorine bleach, phosphates, SLE/SLES, palm oil or microplastics or enzymes. The mineral granules inside, remove dirt without leaving chemical residue on clothes. This also makes the laundry products fine for people with sensitive skin, for this they are also dermatologically tested.
How do the laundry eggs clean your laundry? They contain two different types of grains. The white grains clean and the dark grains increase the efficiency of the white grains by lowering the surface tension of the water. The egg itself also helps to remove dirt and soften laundry. The black grains are made of tourmaline, which is a crystalline silicate mineral group that combines boron with elements such as aluminum, iron, magnesium, sodium, lithium or potassium. It is unclear whether Ecoegg’s tourmaline comes from a lab or from a mine; if it comes from a mine, there are ethical risks involved. The white mineral granules consist of biodegradable surfactants, stabilizers, builders and binders. Exactly what substances these are is unclear.
The shells of the eggs are made of a type of rubber, which is BPA free, we found this in the frequently asked questions on the website. Since they do not clarify what kind of rubber this is, we assume it is synthetic rubber. Unfortunately, synthetic rubber can release microplastics or microrubber pieces and end up in nature. So Ecoegg’s products are not an ideal solution to the plastic problem, unless your washing machine has a microplastic filter.
When developing products, Ecoegg always examines how to reduce the ecological impact and plastic use as much as possible. All the cardboard in the packaging is FSC-certified for sustainable forest management and they use vegetable ink for the printing. The bags containing the refill pellets are 60% paper and 40% plastic. In addition, Ecoegg has “climate-positive staff,” they offset their employees’ carbon emissions by planting trees with Play It Green.