Packaging
Clinique has set substantial packaging sustainability goals for 2025, aiming for 75% of all packaging to be recyclable, refillable, reusable, recycled or recoverable and ensuring 100% of secondary packaging is Forest Stewardship Council (FSC) certified. Despite these commitments, Clinique’s current packaging still relies heavily on virgin plastic, with only modest use of recycled content.
Ingredient Sustainability
All Clinique formulas are now free of parabens, phthalates, and artificial fragrance. The company (via Estée Lauder Companies) also pledged to source palm oil and derivatives responsibly. Despite these steps, an analysis of Clinique’s product ingredients reveals extensive use of petrochemical and non-renewable materials. Many formulas contain mineral oil, petrolatum, silicones, and synthetic polymers (e.g. nylon-12 in powders, polyethylene in lip products) that are fossil-fuel derived and non-biodegradable.
Energy Use and Footprint
Estée Lauder Companies achieved net zero carbon emissions for its direct operations (Scopes 1 and 2) and 100% renewable electricity globally by 2020. This means Clinique’s manufacturing sites and offices are largely powered by renewables or offsets. Clinique’s own digital infrastructure is also addressed. Notably, Clinique.com is powered by renewable energy. Clinique contributes to mitigation by offering carbon-neutral shipping for all U.S. e-commerce orders, funding forest conservation offsets to neutralize delivery emissions.
Waste Management
Waste reduction is an area of partial progress for Clinique. The brand’s primary strategy is improving packaging recyclability rather than fundamentally redesigning the product lifecycle. However, beyond packaging, Clinique offers few circular solutions.
Business Model
Clinique operates on a traditional beauty business model that shows little alignment with “slow” or circular consumption principles. The brand maintains a steady flow of product launches, seasonal collections, and promotions.