Packaging
Core products like salves are sold in tins made of 100% recyclable aluminum, which can be curbside recycled or repurposed. Larger salve sizes come in glass jars instead of plastic, and the brand introduced eco-friendly sugarcane-based bioplastic squeeze tubes for its toothpaste line. These materials (aluminum, glass, plant-based PE) help “near achieving plastic-free packaging” with durable, refillable formats. Some legacy packaging still uses plastic (e.g. liquid soap bottles), and Green Goo has not announced plastic-neutral certifications or take-back programs.
Ingredient Sustainability
Formulas rely almost entirely on renewable plant oils, herbs, and natural waxes. Key base materials (olive, coconut, sunflower oils, shea butter) are organically farmed, avoiding pesticide and fertilizer pollution. Notably, no palm oil is used, sidestepping deforestation concerns common in personal care. Many herbs (calendula, chamomile, arnica, etc.) are cultivated or responsibly wildcrafted in small batches. Green Goo slow-infuses whole botanicals rather than using pre-made extracts, supporting small organic herb farmers and ensuring potency. Problematic natural ingredients with known sustainability issues are largely absent or mitigated.
Occasional ingredients that could raise flags (e.g. wild Arnica or Chaparral shrubs) are niche and used with care, and no evidence of overharvesting or habitat harm is seen. The main synthetic input, potassium hydroxide for soap, is necessary for saponification and is fully consumed in production.
Energy Use and Footprint
Green Goo has localized production and a generally low-carbon product model, but it provides little public data on emissions. Manufacturing is done in the USA. The brand also favors bioplastic and recyclable materials that have lower lifecycle CO₂ impacts than conventional plastic. However, Green Goo does not publish a GHG inventory or climate targets. There is no evidence of renewable energy procurement, carbon offset programs, or emissions reporting on their website or in reports.
Waste Management
The brand avoids single-use disposables by making multi-purpose, long-lasting products: for example, one tin of First Aid salve can replace numerous one-time-use first aid items (antibiotic creams, burn ointments, etc.), and has a long shelf life so it can be used up rather than thrown out expired. This “upcycling” of functionality means fewer separate products (and packages) are needed in the home.
There is no formal take-back program for empty tins/jars, nor a refill program (beyond offering bulk sizes like 1 gallon soap jugs to encourage less packaging per ounce). Still, the brand actively reduces waste through durable packaging and product longevity. Green Goo also introduces refillable or multi-use packaging concepts when possible (for instance, selling larger formats that customers can use to refill smaller bottles).
Business Model
Green Goo’s business model exemplifies slow, intentional consumption rather than fast-paced, disposable trends. The company focuses on a core catalog of evergreen products (herbal salves, balms, soaps) that have remained relevant for years due to their utility, rather than chasing seasonal fads. New product launches are infrequent and mission-driven (e.g. adding natural toothpaste to complete a personal care range, or a few targeted skincare items), not trend-driven novelty. Green Goo does not inundate customers with constant new collections or “limited edition” drops; instead, it refines and stands by its effective formulations.