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Reef safe' sunscreen too good to be true?

September 10, 2025

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The Straits Times

Some of the sunscreen you slather on will end up in lakes, streams or the ocean, even if you do not go swimming.

- Elizabeth Anne Brown

NEW YORK - And a growing body of evidence suggests that ultraviolet (UV) filters, the active ingredients in sunscreens, can harm creatures that live in the water.

Some products are marketed as "reef safe" or friendly to aquatic life. But has that been proven?

The New York Times spoke to a dermatologist, a chemical engineer and several ecologists and toxicologists to find out the best way to protect your skin and the environment, too.

YOUR SUNSCREEN OPTIONS

There are two kinds of UV filters in sunscreens on the market today. Mineral sunscreens create a physical barrier on your skin that reflects UV rays like a mirror, while chemical sunscreens are absorbed into the skin and convert the UV radiation into harmless heat.

Chemical sunscreens are sometimes labelled "organic", but that is a chemistry term, not a claim of environmental friendliness.

Any sunscreen you apply will eventually end up in water. Researchers estimate that between 25 and 50 per cent of sunscreen comes off during a dip.

The rest goes down the drain when you shower or enters the wastewater system through the laundry when you wash your beach towels.

Most standard treatment plants are not effective at removing trace levels of UV filters from wastewater, said Dr Dunia Santiago, a chemical engineer at the University of Las Palmas de Gran Canaria in Spain who studies how treatment plants process contaminants. That means the chemicals are still in the water that flows out of the plant and into the world.

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