You're A Natural

The Detox Label: What the Free-Of Badge Actually Buys

36 min · 1. Juni 2026
Episode The Detox Label: What the Free-Of Badge Actually Buys Cover

Beschreibung

A 'free-of' badge reliably lowers a parent's anxiety. Whether it lowers anything else is the part no one at the shelf can check. In this episode, we debate: whether 'free-of' safety badges are protecting your child from a real chemical exposure, or protecting you from the feeling of not knowing — and whether the distinction matters if the relief is real either way. We unpack 5 concepts you will need before reading the article: The Health Halo, Regrettable Substitution, The Reactive Regime, Population Evidence versus Individual Promise, and The Unverifiable Purchase. Related episodes: The Safe Substitute (cookware coatings and the PFOA-free closure mechanism), The Coco Question (SLS-free personal care and the BPA-to-BPS substitution architecture). Topics: free-of labels, BPA-free, endocrine-free, baby products, safety labels, health halo, regrettable substitution, parental anxiety, risk perception, consumer psychology Read the full article: youreanatural.com/consumer-intelligence/the-detox-label

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56 Folgen

Episode What the Box Won't Tell You About Your Teabag Cover

What the Box Won't Tell You About Your Teabag

Most teabags are sealed with plastic the box never names — polypropylene, nylon, PET, or PLA. A lab counted thousands of genuine microplastic particles per cup, and a 2024 study watched them enter the nucleus of human intestinal cells. The regulator calls the risk "unlikely" — in the same assessment that says the data for a full evaluation does not yet exist. In this episode, we debate: should the absence of evidence of harm be treated as evidence of safety, or is the unmeasured question itself the concern? We unpack 6 concepts you will need before reading the article: The Invisible Seal, The Oligomer Miscount, Cellular Uptake, The Packaging Exemption, The "Unlikely and Unassessed" Pairing, and The Bioplastic Substitution. Related episodes: The Caddy Liner (EN 13432 composting gap and bioplastic claims), The Pan (migration from food-contact materials and testing temperature gaps). Topics: teabag microplastics, polypropylene, PLA bioplastic, food packaging plastic, microplastic health risk, compostable teabags, food labelling, BfR assessment Read the full article: youreanatural.com/consumer-intelligence/what-the-box-won-t-tell-you-about-your-teabag

8. Juni 202646 min
Episode The Bottle That Outlived Its Decade Cover

The Bottle That Outlived Its Decade

A 60-year-old plastic bottle washed up on a Scottish beach in 2026, its logo still legible. That single object quietly forces the question no label on the shelf will answer: when you throw a piece of plastic away, where does it physically go — and does any route you're offered actually make it stop existing? In this episode, we debate the central tension of the You're a Natural report "The Bottle That Outlived Its Decade": whether your faithfulness to sorting and recycling is a rational response to genuinely different disposal outcomes, or an unexamined ritual built on systematically withheld information about what actually happens to your plastic. We unpack five concepts the report builds its argument on — conservation of mass in disposal, the preservation inversion (why burial preserves rather than destroys), the 450-year fiction (the most-repeated statistic about plastic that was never measured), the gap between route instruction and fate disclosure, and why deposit-return schemes work precisely because they are the opposite of the current system. One host argues the routes differ enormously and sorting matters. The other argues the pack never tells you which fate your item joins. Both concede ground. Neither wins. You decide. This is a pre-reading companion. The debate prepares you to read the full report — it does not summarise it. Topics: plastic recycling, microplastics, packaging waste, deposit-return schemes, conservation of mass, plastic degradation, compostable plastics, incinerator ash, fate disclosure, resin codes Related episodes: When Recycling Leaves the Country, The Caddy Liner, The 37 Things Read the full article: youreanatural.com/consumer-intelligence/the-bottle-that-outlived-its-decade

Gestern51 min
Episode Producer Responsibility Cover

Producer Responsibility

In 1990, a Swedish researcher invented the phrase "producer responsibility" to mean manufacturers pay the full cost of their packaging's end of life. Germany implemented it in 1991 — producers funded household collection directly, paying more than EUR 48 per tonne. The UK adopted the phrase in 1997. The regulations required producers to pay approximately 10%. For nearly three decades, taxpayers covered the remaining 90% — while the phrase suggested otherwise. In this episode, we debate: was the UK's thirty-year producer responsibility regime a deception dressed in the language of accountability, or an honestly-negotiated industrial compromise whose only real sin was borrowing a phrase that promised more than the regulations ever delivered? We unpack 5 concepts you will need before reading the article: The Lindhqvist Definition, The 15 December 1995 Agreement, The 10% Gap, The Packaging Recovery Note (PRN), and Rhetorical Concealment. Next time you hear "producer responsibility," ask: what percentage? Related episodes: Weight Is Destiny, The Invoice Moment, When Recycling Leaves the Country Topics: producer responsibility, EPR, packaging waste, PRN system, UK recycling policy, cost transfer, Lindhqvist, Verpackungsverordnung, rhetorical concealment Read the full article: youreanatural.com/consumer-intelligence/producer-responsibility

5. Juni 202653 min
Episode The Invoice Moment Cover

The Invoice Moment

UK producers received their first Extended Producer Responsibility invoices in October 2025 — £423 per tonne of plastic packaging, roughly £1.5 billion in Year One. Over 80% of those costs pass through to consumers as invisible fractions of pennies on the weekly shop. Research shows visible taxes change behaviour roughly seven times more than invisible ones. The UK chose invisible. In this episode, we debate: can a £1.5 billion behaviour-change tax designed to be invisible to consumers actually change behaviour — or does the UK's own Soft Drinks Industry Levy, sitting on the same statute book, prove that visibility was always the lever that made these schemes work? We unpack 5 concepts you will need before reading the article: Extended Producer Responsibility and the Notice of Liability, Tax Salience (the 7x finding from Rivers and Schaufele), the Pass-Through Architecture, Ring-Fencing (and the zero), and the Soft Drinks Industry Levy counter-example. Related episodes: Weight Is Destiny, The Council Bill, The Externality Topics: EPR, Extended Producer Responsibility, packaging tax, tax salience, polluter pays, recycling policy, consumer behaviour, invisible tax Read the full article: youreanatural.com/consumer-intelligence/the-invoice-moment

3. Juni 202645 min
Episode The Detox Label: What the Free-Of Badge Actually Buys Cover

The Detox Label: What the Free-Of Badge Actually Buys

A 'free-of' badge reliably lowers a parent's anxiety. Whether it lowers anything else is the part no one at the shelf can check. In this episode, we debate: whether 'free-of' safety badges are protecting your child from a real chemical exposure, or protecting you from the feeling of not knowing — and whether the distinction matters if the relief is real either way. We unpack 5 concepts you will need before reading the article: The Health Halo, Regrettable Substitution, The Reactive Regime, Population Evidence versus Individual Promise, and The Unverifiable Purchase. Related episodes: The Safe Substitute (cookware coatings and the PFOA-free closure mechanism), The Coco Question (SLS-free personal care and the BPA-to-BPS substitution architecture). Topics: free-of labels, BPA-free, endocrine-free, baby products, safety labels, health halo, regrettable substitution, parental anxiety, risk perception, consumer psychology Read the full article: youreanatural.com/consumer-intelligence/the-detox-label

1. Juni 202636 min