If you have seen headlines about benzene in beauty products and felt a little uneasy, you are not overreacting. It is worth understanding what actually happened, because once you do, the case for simple, single-ingredient oils becomes very clear.
What is benzene, and why is it in the news?
Benzene is a chemical classified as a known human carcinogen, linked to leukemia and other blood cancers. Over the past few years, independent labs and the FDA have detected it in a string of popular products, including aerosol sunscreens, dry shampoos, and more recently some acne treatments. Several of these led to voluntary recalls. The important thing to understand is that benzene is almost never an intended ingredient. It shows up as a contaminant or a byproduct.
How does benzene end up in a beauty product?
There are two main ways. In aerosol products like sprays and dry shampoos, benzene can come from the propellant that pushes the product out of the can. In certain acne treatments, it can form when an unstable synthetic active breaks down over time, especially with heat. In other words, the more moving parts a formula has (propellants, synthetic actives, preservatives, and the conditions they are stored in) the more ways something can go wrong. Notably, when researchers tested simpler acne ingredients, they did not find the same contamination. The problem traced back to instability, not to the idea of an active itself.
Does this mean all skincare is unsafe?
Not at all, and we would never want to scare anyone. Most products on the shelf are perfectly fine, and recalls exist precisely because the system is watching. The honest takeaway is simpler and more useful than panic: the fewer and more stable the ingredients in a product, the fewer ways a contaminant can sneak in. Complexity is where risk tends to hide.
Why a single pure oil is different
This is where our whole philosophy comes from. A bottle of our oil contains one ingredient: the oil. There is no aerosol can, so there is no propellant. There is no synthetic active that can degrade into something it should not. There is no long list of components reacting with each other on your shelf. When olives become squalane or seeds are cold-pressed into jojoba, you get a stable, simple, single thing. The earth already made it the way your skin needs it. We just bottle it and stay out of the way.
How to shop with more confidence
A few simple habits help. Read the full ingredient list, not just the front of the bottle. Be a little more cautious with aerosols, since the can itself can be part of the issue. Favor short ingredient lists you can actually understand. And look for brands that are transparent about exactly what is inside and where it comes from. If a label needs a glossary, that is worth noticing.
At Canadian Grace, we built the brand around the opposite of complexity. One ingredient, fully disclosed, nothing to hide. If that kind of simplicity appeals to you, you can explore our oils here and see exactly what you are getting, because with us, what is on the label is all there is.