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Eco-Me Stainless Steel Cleaner Lemon Fresh -- 16 fl oz


Eco-Me Stainless Steel Cleaner Lemon Fresh
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Eco-Me Stainless Steel Cleaner Lemon Fresh -- 16 fl oz

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    100% Authentic

    • ✓ Products sourced directly from brands or authorized distributors
    • ✓ No third-party resellers
    • ✓ Products stored and shipped in conditions that ensure quality
    • ✓ Vitacost is 100% committed to your well-being and safety

Eco-Me Stainless Steel Cleaner Lemon Fresh Description

  • Family safe
  • Earth-friendly ingredients
  • Natural plant extracts
  • Powered for tough jobs
  • Cleans + polishes
  • Cruelty Free
  • No Harsh Preservatives

 This premium non-abrasive Stainless Steel Cleaner gently cleans, polishes and helps protect all of your stainless steel surfaces, appliances and fixtures. It quickly eliminates fingerprints and smudges for a brilliant streak-free shine.

- Safe to use near food surfaces
- Worry-free formula
- Ideal for both indoor and outdoor use

The Safer Way to Clean!
What Makes it Work?
- Natural Plant Based Cleaning System
- Plant Essential Oils

What it Doesn't Contain:
- No Dyes or Colorants
- No Harsh Preservatives
- No Sulfates (SLS, SLES, ALS)
- No Animal Testing or By-Products

Formerly known as Jack by Eco Me

Eco-Tip:
Avoid polishes with petro-chemicals which are classified as human toxins.


Directions

Shake before use. For stainless steel surfaces and appliances. Follow with a dry cloth and buff to streak-free shine. Test small area before use.
Free Of
Perfumes or dyes (phthalates), harsh preservatives (allergens), sulfates, cruelty.

*These statements have not been evaluated by the Food and Drug Administration. This product is not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease.


Ingredients: Water, Caprylic Capric Triglyceride (Fractionated Coconut Oil), leuconostoc (radish root ferment filtrate), potassium sorbate (food grade preservative), glyceryl caprylate caprate (vegetable-derived thickener), xanthangum, lemongrass essential oil, sodium stearoyl glutamate (amino acid emulsifier), decyl glucoside (palnt-derived soap).
Warnings

The products are all natural and safe, made with food-grade & plant-based ingredients, even so the law requires to provide a Caution Warning: Avoid eye contact, if contact occurs flush with water. If swallowed drink water and contact a physician.

The product you receive may contain additional details or differ from what is shown on this page, or the product may have additional information revealed by partially peeling back the label. We recommend you reference the complete information included with your product before consumption and do not rely solely on the details shown on this page. For more information, please see our full disclaimer.
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7 Ways to Be Kind to Earth in One Day

I'm not sure my editors will let me get away with this woeful lead (editors' note: we did), but here goes: We're headed down a dismal path, and if we don't get our act together pronto, we're in trouble. Young Activists Holding Up Signs to Urge Others to Protect the Earth | Vitacost.com/Blog “Humanity is waging war on nature. This is senseless and suicidal,” writes United Nations Secretary-General António Guterres in the February 2021 U.N. report Making Peace with Nature: A scientific blueprint to tackle the climate, biodiversity and pollution emergencies. “The consequences of our recklessness are already apparent in human suffering, towering economic losses and the accelerating erosion of life on Earth.” Intense—and that's just the first three sentences of the 168-page advisory. In the spirit of not being terrified toward inaction, let's start small. Here are 7 ways you can be kind to Earth in a day:

1. Take stock

This is kind of a freebie, but it's legit. If you've never considered how your behavior affects nature and the planet, now's your chance. Starting somewhere is better than not starting at all.

2. Contemplate the ingredients in your food and other products

Knowing what we consume makes us more informed, and that means we can make better choices for Earth. Here's an ingredient to consider, given it is ubiquitous and there are arguments both for and against it: palm oil—or palm oil known by many other names, including, simply, “vegetable oil” and “vegetable fat.” Also: palmate, glyceryl, stearate, sodium laureth sulfate, sodium lauryl sulfate and octyl palmitate, to name a few, according to the World Wildlife Organization. Palm oil is in everything from food to body products, and it's efficient to grow. But its harvesting isn't great for the planet. That said, some companies are trying to improve processes, and alternatives to palm oil could be worse for Earth.

3. Eat one entirely plant-based meal

Oprah Winfrey, who has a huge megaphone, recently got lots of attention for the one-plant-based-meal-a-day suggestion, though it came from environmental activist Suzy Amis Cameron, whom Winfrey interviewed. Animal agriculture is a huge contributor of greenhouse gas emissions and, in turn, worsens climate change. It also uses lots of water. Red meat—beef, goat and lamb—ranks worst, according to the World Resources Institute. It takes roughly 460 gallons of water to make a quarter-pound hamburger compared with roughly 27.5 for a quarter-pound of corn, according to the U.S. Department of the Interior, which has a fun tool that lets you guess how much water it takes to produce all sorts of things. It also costs more to eat meat and dairy products than grains, legumes and nuts.

4. Strip down and bulk up

You can cool down and warm up in many more carbon-friendly ways than adjusting your thermostat. Hot? Turn on a fan. Cold drinks help too. Consider factors that might lead to your flush: Are you in a room that bakes in direct sunlight? Is a computer on your lap? Is your hair resting on your forehead or neck? And the most apparent but perhaps the most ignored: Are you wearing too much clothing? Cold? Warm up by wearing slippers and piling on layers. Your first layer should be close to your skin in order to trap heat. Physical activity builds heat, so if you're sedentary, get up periodically and move around. Open the shades/blinds/curtains so that sunshine streams in. And consume warm drinks, the simplest of which is water; stick your full glass in the microwave.

5. Say no to one eco-unfriendly thing

What can you do without? Possibilities: straws, single-use plastic, plastic packaging on produce, plastic grocery bags—unless you're going to reuse these things.

6. Rethink water

Everyone runs water a bit before they shower. So if you wash up today, use a bucket to catch what would otherwise go down the drain, and then use it to water plants, soak dishes, flush toilets, etc. Turn off the faucet when you're not using its water stream while brushing your teeth, cleaning veggies, washing your hands, etc.

7. Pick up litter

If you leave your house today, keep an eye out for litter, and then pick it up and dispose of it properly. This matters especially when it comes to plastic that would otherwise go down a storm drain. Many of these suggestions are unremarkable and obvious, but they're still worthwhile—and sometimes we just need a nudge to get going. Plus, these strategies are simple ways to move toward low-waste living, which makes them doable in a day. Mitra Malek writes and edits wellness-related content. Some of her attempts at low-waste living have been cause to chuckle.
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