Ask the Eco Geek: Enviro-friendly dental floss

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Ask the Eco Geek: Enviro-friendly dental floss

Image: istockphoto.com/Anthony Rosenberg

When separating our garbage, we notice that one plastic that we use more than we’d like is dental floss. Is there a bio-degradable or more earth-friendly dental floss available?
Jennifer Tobin, Whitby, ON


Most dental floss is made from nylon or Teflon and the thread is coated with waxes to ease your path to healthy gums. This super-strong thread won’t degrade so it shouldn’t be flushed down your toilet. It can contribute to a blockage in the pipe between the sewer and your home.


In some Canadian municipalities, discarded floss is also jamming pumps at sewage-treatment facilities.

Native Americans used yucca-leaf fibres to make dental floss, but today, manufacturers such as Radius are making natural flosses from silk that will biodegrade in a landfill and perhaps even in the compost in your yard.

Radius is available at Whole Foods locations in Canada and at health-food stores such as Choices Markets in Vancouver and the Lower Mainland. However, some environmentalists and animal-rights activists ask consumers not to buy flosses made from silk because silk production causes painful deaths for insects.

Got a pressing environmental question? Ask Steve Bearton, journalist, environmental advocate and the Eco Geek!





Tags: eco-geek, toothbrush, toothpastetag cloud.

5 Comments

posted Jul 14, 2008 - 9:30 am by Dan
"natural flosses from silk that will biodegrade in a landfill and perhaps even in the compost in your yard"

Nothing biodegrades in a landfill, my friend. Very little anyway. Newsprint is one of the most readily biodegradable substances, and readable newspapers can be dug up from 50 years ago. The compost in your yard is a better bet. Your statement should read:

"natural flosses from silk that will biodegrade in the compost in your yard"

Good grief I think it's stupid to worry about floss anyway, it probably accounts for 0.0000001% of the total garbage stream.
posted Jul 15, 2008 - 8:22 pm by Letty
I appreciate the info.
posted Aug 11, 2008 - 12:24 pm by Emily
It's not necessarily the actual floss that's the problem, though, is it? It's the production, the packaging, the shipping... shouldn't the whole process behind something be good for the environment? Nylon and Teflon don't biodegrade, you're right, but making them puts tons of greenhouse gasses into the air every year. Using less floss is probably the answer. DenTek makes a floss pick with a biodegradable handle that you can compost or incinerate without an issue. Each pick thing has about an inch of floss on it, so that cuts down on whatever you're probably using as far as rolled floss is concerned. Plus, doesn't silk processing use child labor in some countries. Not cool.

Who cares how much of the garbage stream it takes up? If you feel bad about the plastic in dental floss, use something else!
posted Nov 19, 2008 - 1:03 am by David brown
Come on if dental floss plugs our sewer we have bigger infrastructure problems than even the government thinks. Stupid answer. Waste of time. I really like the site but come on. Was this answer written by a 12 year old
posted Nov 19, 2008 - 1:04 am by David brown
Come on if dental floss plugs our sewer we have bigger infrastructure problems than even the government thinks. Stupid answer. Waste of time. I really like the site but come on. Was this answer written by a 12 year old
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