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U.S. Certifier QAI, NaTrue Mutually Recognize Products With Organic Content

This article was originally published in The Rose Sheet

Executive Summary

Products certified in the U.S. as containing organic ingredients will be eligible for expedited certification across the Atlantic under a mutual recognition agreement between San Diego, Calif.-based Quality Assurance International and Brussels-based industry group NaTrue

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Natural/Organic Standards Organizations Talk Harmonization At Summit

At the Sustainable Cosmetics Summit in New York, representatives from organic and/or natural personal-care standards organizations compared criteria and called for harmonization to dispel consumer confusion

Natural/Organic Standards Organizations Talk Harmonization At Summit

At the Sustainable Cosmetics Summit in New York, representatives from organic and/or natural personal-care standards organizations compared criteria and called for harmonization to dispel consumer confusion

Sustainable Cosmetics In Brief

Confusion over standards not stopping organic buying: Consumers are becoming more confused about industry standards, but are buying natural and organic personal-care products at increasing rates, according to Amarjit Sahota, president of research firm Organic Monitor. Speaking at the Sustainable Cosmetics Summit March 25 in New York, Sahota estimated the global market for organic personal-care products will swell to $11.7 billion by 2012, up from $7.9 billion in 2008. Ninety-four percent of sales come from consumers in North America and Europe, the U.S. and Germany leading the way. Sahota maintained that universal standards defining "natural" and "organic" are needed, rather than the multiple competing industry standards and certifications that currently exist on either side of the Atlantic

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