3

I recently used an all purpose cleaner that I found out was a highly toxic un-vetted product, according to the EWG. I used it on a couple of shelves. I obviously threw the product away, but how do I know rid my shelves of this toxic, is simply washing it enough? Link to product. http://www.ewg.org/guides/cleaners/1545-SimpleGreenConcentratedAllPurposeCleaner

Mooseman
  • 11,567
  • 16
  • 58
  • 99
TreeKing
  • 139
  • 1

3 Answers3

4

I did some reading on this. Wikipedia says the following which I checked elsewhere:

2-Butoxyethanol usually decomposes in the presence of air within a few days by reacting with oxygen radicals.[12] It has not been identified as a major environmental contaminant, nor is it known to bio-accumulate.[13] 2-Butoxyethanol biodegrades in soils and water, with a half life of 1–4 weeks in aquatic environments. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2-Butoxyethanol

The product "Simple Green" is considered to have low toxicity, which means there isn't much to worry about. Only with extreme concentration is there a concern.

From what I read, allow the shelf to air out over a few days if you have concerns.

subjectivist
  • 3,485
  • 1
  • 14
  • 27
  • 3
    If you consider this highly toxic (though as mentioned by @dmcdivitt, it is not), then why did you write, "I obviously threw the product away,", when it should have been disposed in a safe manner, e.g. municipal HM collectoin? See http://www.epa.gov/osw/conserve/materials/hhw.htm . – DrMoishe Pippik Feb 18 '15 at 00:57
1

My advice is to clean the shelves again with homemade non-toxic and eco-friendly cleaner. There are tones of recipes on Pinterest. Most of the time I mix some liquid dishwashing detergent and warm water. Or you can call and ask your local cleaning company.

DonnaB
  • 11
  • 2
1

2-butoxyethanol evaporates pretty quickly once you wipe up the excess. If your shelves feel dry, they are dry and there's no more there to worry about.

aaron
  • 189
  • 2