
Now i get what you mean. Ignore my ramblings about pH, its just neutrality instanly associates my brain with acid base reactions.
So your talking about about carbon neutral in the sense of removing as much carbon from the air as you produce. Enviromental issues such as these are often disgused for manufacturers gain as Steve implied.
eg. Using splitter is enviromentally friendly.
This is debatable as the concentrations of phosphate used to make an effective cleaning agent are much higher than those derived from petrochemicals. If each molecule cost the same amount of energy to reprocess then using splitters would be detremental to the enviroment. It is the waste reprocessing cost that is often overlooked, so it might be "enviromentally frienldy" to produce a product, but very costly to dispose/reprocess it.
A common misconception is that recycled paper is a good thing. It costs more in energy terms to reprocess paper than it does to create new paper from trees. If the trees are grown specifically for paper manufacturing, then enviromentally speaking, its better not to use recycled paper.
Im sure others will not agree, but thats my 2 cents
I would love to examine this new "envirometally friendly" product, so please fire up some details as i have a day off tommorow and have nothing better to do

Graeme
Access Cleaning Solutions