EcoScan
Eco Chemistry

What's Really Inside Your Cleaning Products

A factual reference on surfactant chemistry, EU eco-certification criteria, and the measurable effects of household detergents on Czech river ecosystems.

Updated April 2026  ·  casuwoparadi.eu

EU Ecolabel promotional display at trade exhibition
EU Ecolabel exhibition stand. Source: Wikimedia Commons / CC BY-SA

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EU Ecolabel certified product
Certification

EU Ecolabel for Cleaning Products: What the Criteria Actually Require

Decision 2017/1217/EU set measurable thresholds for hard surface cleaners. Here is what manufacturers must demonstrate before the flower logo can appear on the label.

Algal bloom caused by phosphate pollution in water
Environment

Phosphates and Surfactants in Czech Rivers: Documenting the Connection

CHMI water quality measurements from the Vltava and Elbe basins show how wastewater treatment efficiency shapes the downstream concentration of detergent-derived compounds.

Key Figures

The Scale of Household Chemical Use in Czech Households

Czech households collectively use approximately 120,000 tonnes of cleaning products annually, according to data from the Czech Statistical Office (2023). The composition of these products varies considerably — from phosphate-free laundry detergents to multi-surface sprays that still rely on halogenated solvents.

EU Regulation 648/2004 on detergents mandated full surfactant biodegradability and established the TAED (tetraacetylethylenediamine) labelling requirement. Despite this, a significant share of products sold in Czech retail still contain preservatives and fragrances not covered by the regulation's scope.

73%
Phosphate-free laundry detergents Share of laundry products sold in Czech Republic that meet the post-2013 phosphate restriction under Regulation 259/2012/EU.
4.1%
EU Ecolabel market share Proportion of cleaning products in Czech retail bearing EU Ecolabel or Nordic Swan certification as of 2024 ECHA estimates.
28
Regulated surfactant types Number of surfactant compound groups covered by the Annex II test requirements under EU Detergent Regulation.
Diagram showing surfactant compounds and their effect on water surface tension

Eco-Certification Schemes Active in Czech Republic

Three primary certification frameworks apply to cleaning products distributed in Czech retail channels, each with distinct scope and verification requirements.

EU Ecolabel logo

EU Ecolabel

Administered by the European Commission and national competent bodies (in Czech Republic: CENIA), this label covers detergents, surface cleaners, and dishwashing products. Criteria are reviewed every 4–6 years; the current cleaning products criteria date from 2017.

Regulation 66/2010/EC

Nordic Swan Ecolabel

Although a Nordic scheme, Nordic Swan-certified products are widely imported into Czech retail, particularly in supermarket chains. Its criteria for cleaning products restrict synthetic fragrances, certain preservatives, and require a minimum percentage of bio-based raw materials.

Nordic scheme — imported goods

Cradle to Cradle Certified

A product standard that assesses material health, recyclability of packaging, renewable energy use in manufacturing, water stewardship, and social fairness. A small number of cleaning product brands available in Czech e-commerce carry C2C Silver or Gold designation.

C2C Products Innovation Institute