Scientists and sustainability experts at Givaudan came up with a
product they call Vetivyne by using water-soluble extract from
exhausted vetiver roots, a by-product of the extraction procedure
used to produce vetiver oil for fragrances, the company said on
Monday.
In 2012 Givaudan established an organic, fair-trade partnership with
Haitian vetiver farmers to improve cultivation practices in the
poverty-stricken island nation. With its latest initiative, Givaudan
hopes to cash in on increasing demand for products that consumers
see as helping trim environmental waste. [https://reut.rs/2IZtBVc]
Vetivyne "contributes to answering the consumers' need for more
inspiring and eco-friendly products", said Maurizio Volpi, who heads
Givaudan's fragrance division.
Other companies including Firmenich and New York-based International
Flavors and Fragrances -- along with Givaudan, the world's leading
producer of raw materials for the perfume industry -- have also
established sustainable vetiver farming programs in southwest Haiti.
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Givaudan works with a cooperative of more than 260 vetiver farmers
in Haiti, where living conditions in rural areas are among the worst
in the world and some families earn $2 per day.
Natural catastrophes including a 2010 earthquake that killed some
200,000 people helped plunge Haiti into prolonged chaos, and some
have pinned their hopes on vetiver -- known as Haiti's "super crop"
-- to help the economy stabilize.
With Givaudan's new product, the active ingredient "is fully
natural, concentrated, odor-free and offers clinically proven skin
benefits", the company said, including skin hydration, suppleness
and wrinkle-reduction around the mouth.
The company gave no sales forecasts for the ingredient, which also
helps boost the duration that a fragrance lasts when applied to the
skin, Givaudan said.
(Reporting by Michael Shields and John Miller, editing by Louise
Heavens)
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