Sustainability
Packaging
La Roche-Posay’s packaging is still predominantly plastic. The brand has set a goal to reach 100% recycled plastic across its packaging by 2030, with 70% recycled content targeted for 2025. The Anthelios sunscreen body lotion was reformulated into a paper-based tube that reduces plastic by 45% compared to the previous version.
These innovations are meaningful but currently apply to a limited slice of the lineup. The majority of the catalog, including most facial moisturizers, serums, sunscreens, and acne treatments, still ships in conventional plastic bottles, tubes, and pumps with no published recycled content percentage and no clear consumer recycling instructions.
A refillable pouch system has been introduced for a handful of body and face washes - These pouches use up to 77% less plastic than the original 400ml bottles, but they remain flexible plastic film, which is generally not curbside recyclable. Refill options for moisturizers, sunscreens, treatments, and serums do not exist.
Ingredient Sustainability
La Roche-Posay’s formulations lean heavily on petrochemical-derived synthetics. Across a representative sample of best-sellers dimethicone, dimethiconol, and other silicones appear at high positions in nearly every ingredient list. Silicones are environmentally persistent, do not readily biodegrade, and accumulate in waterways and sediments. Some of these polymers function as microplastics under EU REACH definitions. Petrolatum, polyisobutene, and isodecane derivatives are also present.
The sunscreen line, one of the brand’s flagship categories, presents the most serious sustainability red flags. Octocrylene degrades into benzophenone, a compound documented to harm coral reefs, oysters, and other marine organisms at environmentally realistic concentrations. Oxybenzone is banned in Hawaii, the U.S. Virgin Islands, Aruba, and Palau for the same reason. The shea butter used across the Lipikar line is sourced from a cooperative-based program in Burkina Faso, which addresses fair pricing, pre-financing, and capacity-building for roughly 40,000 women. This is genuinely above industry average for shea sourcing. However, conventional shea processing in West Africa is heavily reliant on firewood.
The brand uses no frankincense, sandalwood, or rosewood, which removes one common overharvesting concern in skincare, but it also uses very few whole-plant botanicals overall, relying instead on isolated synthetic-equivalent actives.
Energy Use and Carbon Footprint
The brand’s primary manufacturing site, the Active Cosmetics Production plant in La Roche-Posay, France, has operated as carbon-neutral since 2018. The plant pioneered the use of bio-propane, derived from used cooking oils and organic plants, as a heating fuel beginning in 2016, replacing fossil-fuel gas.
Parent company L’Oréal committed to reaching 100% renewable energy across all operated sites by 2025 and has been near that target in recent reporting.
L’Oréal holds emissions reduction targets approved by the Science Based Targets initiative (SBTi) for medium and long-term horizons. Group-level emissions are measured annually with third-party auditing, broken down by scope, and disclosed publicly through L’Oréal’s universal registration document.
Recent SBTi tracking indicates L’Oréal is significantly off track on its scope 3 target, which covers emissions from the supply chain, ingredient sourcing, and consumer use phase.
The Cradle to Cradle Silver certification for the La Roche-Posay product range achieved Gold for Renewable Energy and Carbon Management, indicating strong performance on the directly operated side.
Waste Management
Waste reduction efforts at La Roche-Posay are modest and largely tied to packaging changes already discussed. The refillable pouch system, available for around five body and face wash products, is the clearest circularity initiative. The Cicaplast Balm B5+ is genuinely multi-purpose, marketed as a single product for dry hands, chapped lips, post-procedure repair, diaper rash, and general dry skin, which reduces the need to buy several specialized creams. The Lipikar line similarly consolidates eczema-prone body care into a small set of staple products.
However, there is no takeback program, no buyback program, and no in-store collection scheme published in the U.S. market.
Business Model
The lineup is built around evergreen dermatological staples rather than trend cycles, limited-edition drops, or seasonal collections.
The brand does not chase viral aesthetics or churn out frequent new launches the way many beauty companies do. Promotional pricing is more aggressive than a true slow-consumption brand would run, with regular sales through pharmacy and Amazon channels, and the affordability of the products means a single consumer may accumulate more units than they need.