Abbreviation | UKCPI |
---|---|
Legal status | Non-profit organization |
Purpose | Cleaning products in the UK |
Location |
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Region served | UK |
Membership | UK cleaning products companies |
Director General | Philip Malpass |
Main organ | UKCPI Council |
Affiliations | Cosmetic, Toiletry and Perfumery Association, British Association for Chemical Specialities, British Aerosol Manufacturers Association, Chemical Industries Association and International Association for Soaps, Detergents and Maintenance Products (AISE - the European Association for Soaps, Detergents, and Maintenance Products) |
Website | UKCPI |
The UK Cleaning Products Industry Association is the leading trade association for companies representing UK producers of cleaning and hygiene products. This includes soaps, washing powders and liquids, household disinfectants, air care and polishes, as well as professional cleaning and hygiene products used in industrial and institutional applications.
UKCPI runs awareness campaigns relating to product safety [1] and energy efficiency, [2] and provides materials for schools to teach about effective hand washing. [3]
The inaugural meeting of the Society of British Soap Makers was held at 2.30pm on 7 July 1954, at the Queens Hotel in Leeds, and was chaired by Mr RE Huffam of Unilever Limited. Its first AGM was held at the same location, on 19 October 1955.
In 1963, the organisation became a member of European body AIS, which later merged with FIFE to become what is now AISE. In 1967 its name was changed to the Soap and Detergent Industry Association (SDIA).
In 1970 the SDIA merged with the Soap Makers Association and, that same year, appointed its first director general, Mr GV Richardson. In 2001, the merged organisation, which was still known as SDIA, changed its name to UK Cleaning Products Industry Association.
The UK cleaning products industry is now worth an estimated £4.5 billion. £800 million of that is taken up by companies serving the industrial and institutional sector (food processing, beverage, hospitals and healthcare cleaning and disinfection, restaurants and hotels). The remainder of the total amount is taken up by household or homecare cleaning products such as laundry, bathroom and kitchen cleaning and disinfection, surface and air care products.
In September 2009, Philip Malpass replaced Dr Andy Williams as Director General.
UKCPI represents the UK-wide cleaning products industry, including companies which make and use products for hygiene, soap (detergents and conventional soaps), cleaning surfaces, and air fresheners. It is involved with marketing the industry as a whole (although the industry has some of the UK's notorious largest spenders [4] on advertising) and regulation.
UKCPI represents its members’ interests directly with UK government departments and bodies on the formulation and application of government policy and regulation. As part of this remit, it is a member of the All Party Manufacturing Group. [5]
It also works closely with the International Association for Soaps, Detergents and Maintenance Products (AISE), to represent its members' interests with the European Commission and European Parliament. UKCPI is also a member of the government's Chemicals Stakeholders Forum (CSF), the Alliance of Chemical Associations (ACA) and the Confederation of British Industry (CBI).
In terms of its members, UKCPI provides advice and guidance notes to members regarding forthcoming legislation and regulation, organises regional meetings to keep members up-to-date on technical and regulatory developments and issues. It also identifies non-competitive issues of common interest to its members and seeks their resolution through industry-wide consensus.
UKCPI maintains its own website and a members-only extranet.
It is based in Tattenhall in Cheshire West and Chester.
Members include:
A detergent is a surfactant or a mixture of surfactants with cleansing properties when in dilute solutions. There are a large variety of detergents, a common family being the alkylbenzene sulfonates, which are soap-like compounds that are more soluble in hard water, because the polar sulfonate is less likely than the polar carboxylate to bind to calcium and other ions found in hard water.
Hygiene is a set of practices performed to preserve health. According to the World Health Organization (WHO), "Hygiene refers to conditions and practices that help to maintain health and prevent the spread of diseases." Personal hygiene refers to maintaining the body's cleanliness. Hygiene activities can be grouped into the following: home and everyday hygiene, personal hygiene, medical hygiene, sleep hygiene, and food hygiene. Home and every day hygiene includes hand washing, respiratory hygiene, food hygiene at home, hygiene in the kitchen, hygiene in the bathroom, laundry hygiene, and medical hygiene at home.
Rinso is a brand name of laundry soap and detergent marketed by Unilever. The brand was created by Robert Spear Hudson and originally branded Hudson's Soap, which was sold to Lever Brothers of Port Sunlight, England, in 1908. It was introduced in the United States by Lever Brothers Company in 1918.
Tide is an American brand of laundry detergent manufactured and marketed by Procter & Gamble. Introduced in 1946, it is the highest-selling detergent brand in the world, with an estimated 14.3 percent of the global market.
Persil is a German brand of laundry detergent manufactured and marketed by Henkel around the world except in the United Kingdom, Ireland, France, Latin America, China, Australia and New Zealand, where it is manufactured and marketed by Unilever. Persil was introduced in 1907 by Henkel. It was the first commercially available laundry detergent that combined bleach with the detergent. The name was derived from two of its original ingredients, sodium perborate and sodium silicate.
Zest is an American brand of soap and body wash owned by High Ridge Brands for the United States, Canada and Puerto Rico and by Unilever for the rest of the world. It was originally introduced by Procter & Gamble in 1955 with the slogan "For the first time in your life, feel really clean."
Persil Power was a laundry detergent product developed and sold in the mid-1990s by Unilever.
Sunlight is a brand of laundry soap, laundry detergent and dishwashing detergent manufactured and marketed around the world by Unilever, except in the United States and Canada, where it has been owned by Sun Products since 2010.
Fairy is an international brand, primarily used for washing up liquid and dishwasher detergent, owned by the American multinational consumer products company, Procter & Gamble. The brand originated in the United Kingdom in 1898 and is now used on a number of P&G products in various markets.
Henkel AG & Co. KGaA, commonly known as Henkel, is a German multinational chemical and consumer goods company headquartered in Düsseldorf, Germany.
Household chemicals are non-food chemicals that are commonly found and used in and around the average household. They are a type of consumer goods, designed particularly to assist cleaning, house and yard maintenance, cooking, pest control and general hygiene purposes often stored in the kitchen or garage.
Laundry detergent is a type of detergent used for cleaning dirty laundry (clothes). Laundry detergent is manufactured in powder and liquid form.
Dishwashing liquid, also known as dishwashing soap, dish detergent, and dish soap is a detergent used to assist in dishwashing. It is usually a highly-foaming mixture of surfactants with low skin irritation, and is primarily used for hand washing of glasses, plates, cutlery, and cooking utensils in a sink or bowl. In addition to its primary use, dishwashing liquid also has various informal applications, such as for creating bubbles, clothes washing and cleaning oil-affected birds.
Lilleborg AS is a major hygiene and cleaning article company in Norway, owned by the Orkla Group. It was established in 1833, and was one of the first companies in Norway to start manufacturing brand name products. It currently operates three factories in Norway, and employs a total working staff of 595.
A virucide is any physical or chemical agent that deactivates or destroys viruses. The substances are not only virucidal but can be also bactericidal, fungicidal, sporicidal or tuberculocidal.
A soap substitute is a natural or synthetic cleaning product used in place of soap or other detergents, typically to reduce environmental impact or health harms or provide other benefits.
Bleach activators are compounds that allow a lower washing temperature than would be required otherwise to achieve the full activity of bleaching agents in the wash liquor. Bleaching agents, usually peroxides, are usually sufficiently active only at 60 °C and up. With bleach activators, this activity can be achieved at lower temperatures. Bleach activators are included in some laundry detergent powders, some laundry additive powders, and a few laundry additive pods. They are not included in any liquid laundry detergents. Bleach activators react with hydrogen peroxide in aqueous solution to form peroxy acids. Peroxy acids are more active bleaches than hydrogen peroxide at lower temperatures (<60 °C), but are too unstable to be stored in their active form, and hence must be generated in situ.
The International Association for Soaps, Detergents and Maintenance Products (AISE) is a trade association representing over 900 European producers of household and professional cleaning products. It was founded in 1995 as a merger of the International Association of the Soap and Detergent Industry and the International Federation of Associations of Cleaning Products Manufacturers, the former being founded in 1952.