Cleaning Uses

Very alkaline in nature with a high pH, baking soda is one of the top eco-friendly cleaning ingredients and is used in several cleaning products, especially green cleaning ones. You can find it in laundry detergents, cleansers, mold control products, cleansers, carpet fresheners and cleaners, dishwashing soaps, automatic dishwasher detergents, air fresheners, toilet bowl cleaners, floor cleaners, all-purpose cleaners, and stain removers. It is known for its fantastic deodorizing, whitening, brightening, cleaning, and gentle scrubbing abilities. Due to its powder form, it is also great at absorbing grease and spills. In addition, it has bactericidal and stain removing dental abilities. If it can work on your teeth, it definitely will work on other surfaces, too. You can also mix up your own green cleaning creations with it.

Other Uses

In addition to its use in cleaning products, baking soda can be found in several products, such as personal care products (bath products, toothpaste, deodorants, cleansers, soap), drugs (skin treatments), baked goods, and cat litter. Baking soda is also taken for heartburn, acid indigestion, and upset stomachs resulting from such problems. In addition, you can use it to adjust the pH of your swimming pool. Baking soda is also considered a biopesticide, which are pesticides derived from certain kinds of natural materials.

Product Brands Containing Baking Soda

Aside from baking soda coming in the familiar Arm & Hammer box, baking soda is found in several other products as an ingredient. To see if certain products contain baking soda, try searching the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services Household Products Database, the Environmental Working Group’s (EWG) Guide to Healthy Cleaning, or the EWG’s Skin Deep Cosmetic Database. Remember, if searching using the general term “baking soda” does not generate a lot of results, try entering one of its synonyms.

Regulation

When baking soda is used in personal care products, food, or drugs it is monitored by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration. For other uses, such as pesticides and cleaning products, it is monitored by the Environmental Protection Agency.

Environmental Effects

No data shows baking soda to have negative environmental effects. However, it is indeed mined from a material called trona, which is found in Wyoming, and then processed into baking soda. A secondhand environment impact is its carbon footprint from mining and processing it.