New Choice for green Diapers
by: silver@bauq.com
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Word Count: 384
If you are eco-savvy parents, you might already notice there are many flushable diapers available in the retailer stores. One of them is gDiapers (www.gdiapers.com) found by Jason and Kim Graham-Nye, an eco-conscious parent. It is the world's first flushable diaper and stresses on 100% functional and fashionable. You might ask why it can be flushable because it contains a sports-clothing-liking pad which can be easily flushable. And a cotton and washable outer pant fits your baby's body. Your baby can feel comfortable and less likely to get diaper rash. There are many bright color available such as pink, blue and brown. This diaper made of wood pulp and super absorbing polyacrylate (SAP). You can dump the pad into the toilet when it is absorbing and soiled since it has no plastic. Even if you can flush out, you can garden compost and it will break down within 50 to 150 days. It has Cradle to Cradle certification by the McDonough Braungart Design Chemistry which means there is no landfill if you choose gDiapers because it has no elemental chlorine, no smell, no garbage, no perfumes and no guilt which is good for our environment. gDiapers get celebrity endorsement like Julia Roberts. "Making less garbage in every way possible", she said. We can make a different as well as eco-friendly in motherhood. There are more green diapers to choose such as Seventh Generation diapers. (www.seventhgeneration.com) They are chlorine-free diapers which do not contribute to dioxin pollution. Also, these diapers can reduce cancer rates by lowering dioxin exposure. Seven Generation also have baby chlorine-free wipes without bleach and do not contain alcohol or synthetic ingredients. Or you can choose gel-free Tushies diapers which do not contain latex, perfume, dye, TBT, GMO, and it is chlorine-free wood pulp product with cotton for natural high absorbency. It stresses on assembling in the U.S.A with domestic materials and certified non-chlorine bleached wood pulp from Scandinavian, sustainable, renewable, and family owned forests. (www.tushies.com) In fact, disposable diapers already make up a third of U.S.'s solid waste, while laundering cloth diapers can use up to 20 thousands gallons of water per baby. Therefore, we should more concern about our baby's diapers because each small waste can cause big waste in our earth.
About the Author
Chloe W. is the marketing analyst of the leading Internet Company located in New York City. She provides new trend shopping insights for online shoppers.
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