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Unlocking potential: Australian olive oil producers urged to upcycle pomace for cosmetics as health, wellness interests surge

This content item was originally published on www.cosmeticsdesign-asia.com, a William Reed online publication.

By Amanda Lim

- Last updated on GMT

Australian olive oil producers have huge opportunity to upcycle pomace as cosmetic ingredients to tap into health and wellness trends, according to industry experts.

A recently published fellowship report, which was put together over two years, dives into the potential cosmetic use of byproducts from olive oil production.

“Upcycling olive oil waste has the potential to not only reduce the olive oil industry’s carbon footprint and move close to a circular economy, but also to capture the valuable antioxidants which remain within the waste and give them a purpose of their own,” wrote author Catherine Cervasio, a natural skincare product development specialist who also founded the brand Aromababy.

Anecdote Hand Balm
Anecdote Hand Balm developed with upcycled olive oil waste.

The report, Olive oil: Tapping into the upcycled beauty trend to embrace a more sustainable future ​was published​ under the International Specialised Skills Institute (ISS Institute) and funded by the Italian Australian Foundation (IAF).

Speaking to the Beauty Broadcast​, Cervasio emphasised that olive oil processing produces a huge amount of waste.

“Olive oil waste accounts for up to 85% and in some cases, even higher from olive oil processing… You’ve got this huge amount of waste that’s either being used as a component in stock feed or fertiliser. It’s so high in antioxidants that it can’t go into the ground straightaway and has to sit for up to 12 months.”

Cervasio’s report highlighted that the presence of antioxidants in olive oil makes the waste worth researching further into as a potentially powerful cosmetic ingredient.

“Olive oil is rich in vitamin E, there’s antioxidant properties. There are some slight preservative properties in it. I think the opportunity is really enormous,” said Cervasio.

Aside from olive oil shortages, one of the major challenges highlighted was the lack of interest from producers to explore this avenue, as they believed there was insufficient demand.

“Outside of that, nobody had much interest, and this was driven from a lack of demand. But I disagree with that because there is a huge awareness of health and wellness. There's a huge focus on wellbeing and self-care,” said Cervasio.

Taralinga waste
Upwards of 85% of olives turn into waste in the oil extraction process.

Cervasio hopes the report can encourage Australian olive oil producers, which produce olive oil that rivals some of the best in the world, to explore how the waste can be used for cosmetics.

“This can put Australia, or A-beauty, on the map as an innovator of novel ingredients – not just for the sake of inventing something, but something that has got substance.”

Cervasio told us that she was already working on developing products made with olive oil pomace. 

“I am part way through the process of stablising the pomace and using it as a raw material in several different formulations from body scrubs to face cream, and olive oil serums."

Moving forward, she hopes to continue researching the pomace to understand its full potential.

Cervasio concluded: “We're making sure that we know more about the benefits of the actual waste material so we can really promote it on a global stage. And I really want to share this information through some of the associations as well as through some of the international cosmetic shows so that more people learn about this.”

For more insights into olive oil and this report, check out the video above.

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