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When we first published this guide in 2019, environmentally responsible ergonomic pillows were a niche category. Six years later, the market looks dramatically different, with changes both encouraging and concerning.

Consumer demand for sustainable sleep products has surged. The global sleeping pillow market, valued at roughly $15.5 billion in 2024, is projected to reach $24.3 billion by 2034, driven by the adoption of eco-friendly materials.

A Sustainable Furnishings Council survey found that 90 percent of consumers prefer eco-friendly products. Among pillow buyers, 62 percent prioritize sustainable materials such as organic cotton, natural latex, and recycled foam. Certifications have matured. GOTS and GOLS are now well-known benchmarks, giving shoppers clearer signals of true organic claims. New materials, such as organic kapok fiber and buckwheat-latex hybrids, have expanded choices beyond memory foam and down.

However, increased demand has also fueled more greenwashing. Research from the Silent Spring Institute found PFAS, toxic “forever chemicals” used for water- and stain-resistant properties, in products labeled “green” and “nontoxic,” including pillow protectors and children’s bedding. The Environmental Working Group found PFAS in 35 of 60 textile products tested, with bedding among the most contaminated. California’s AB 1817, effective January 2025, bans intentionally added PFAS in new textiles, including bedding, with more than 100 ppm (dropping to 50 ppm by 2027). Federal regulation remains inconsistent. The EPA’s 2024 PFAS water standards face rollback under the current administration, and enforcement gaps persist in most states.

With this mixed outlook, you need to look beyond marketing. Third-party certifications—GOTS, GOLS, OEKO-TEX Standard 100, MADE SAFE—are the most reliable eco indicators, not self-applied labels like “natural” or “eco.” Avoid any “stain-resistant” or “water-repellent” claims unless PFAS-free status is independently verified. For more on how to spot greenwashing, see Earth911’s guide.

This article includes affiliate links. If you buy something through these links, we earn a small commission that helps support our work.

What this means for pillow shoppers

Mattresses and pillows can affect your comfort throughout the day. If you’ve had whiplash or have spinal issues, talk to your doctor about the best pillow for you. For everyday aches, there are plenty of eco-friendly ergonomic pillows to choose from.

No matter if they’re called ergonomic, orthopedic, chiropractic, contour, or cervical, these are the most eco-friendly pillows we found for neck and back pain.

Holy Lamb Organics

Holy Lamb Organics continues to handcraft pillows in Oakville, Washington. Their All-Natural Orthopedic Neck Pillow ($199), designed by a chiropractor, has a thin center channel and two neck bolsters, one thick and one thin. It uses Eco Wool, which is a good option for people who find memory foam too warm. Holy Lamb also offers Certified Organic Wool Bed Pillows made with GOTS-certified New Zealand wool and organic cotton. All products are shipped in plastic-free packaging.

Holy Lamb Organics orthopedic neck pillow
Holy Lamb Organics orthopedic neck pillow

White Lotus

White Lotus Home makes the KaPillow, a contour pillow filled with kapok and designed with a half-seam so the center is shallower than the sides. It’s adjustable, so you can add or remove stuffing to get the firmness you want. Their buckwheat hull pillow is a petroleum-free alternative to memory foam and uses certified organic materials.

White Lotus kapok contour pillow
White Lotus kapok contour pillow

Organic Textiles

Organic Textiles still offers its GOLS-certified organic latex contour pillow, now in both high-loft and low-loft versions, all with organic cotton covers. The ergonomic design supports the natural curve of your neck for better alignment, and the pillows come in medium-firm density, making them good for both side and back sleepers.

Organic Textiles natural latex low-loft pillow
Organic Textiles natural latex low-loft pillow

Organic Textiles

Organic Textiles still offers its GOLS-certified organic latex contour pillow, now in both high-loft and low-loft versions, all with organic cotton covers. The ergonomic design supports the natural curve of your neck for better alignment, and the pillows come in medium-firm density, making them good for both side and back sleepers.

Savvy Rest

Savvy Rest still makes its medium-firm Dunlop latex contour pillow, which has a high, rounded edge and a center hollow to cradle your head. All their pillows use unbleached, naturally colored organic cotton covers. The product line now includes eight pillow styles: four formed natural latex and four customizable loose-fill options, such as shredded latex, organic wool, wool-latex blend, and organic kapok.

Snuggle-Pedic

Snuggle-Pedic still offers its popular adjustable shredded memory foam pillow on Amazon. The bamboo cover and CertiPUR-US certified foam are better than conventional options, but Snuggle-Pedic’s pillows are not fully organic since the foam is still petroleum-based. If you want truly organic materials, look for natural latex or wool pillows from the other brands listed here.

Snuggle-Pedic’s Contour Pillow

Avocado Green Pillow

Avocado is now one of the most thoroughly certified organic pillow brands. Their vegan pillows are handmade in Los Angeles. The Green Pillow combines GOLS-certified organic shredded latex and GOTS-certified organic kapok tree fiber inside an organic cotton quilted cover. It’s adjustable, with a zipper so you can add or remove fill, and comes with extra fill for customization. Certifications include GOTS, OEKO-TEX Standard 100, MADE SAFE, and GREENGUARD Gold for low emissions.

Avocado’s Green Pillow blends natural latex and kapok filling.

Naturepedic Organic Side Sleeper Pillow

Naturepedic puts a lot of ergonomic design into their organic pillows. The Organic Side Sleeper Pillow has a special curve to fill the space between your shoulder and head, with GOLS-certified shredded latex fill and a GOTS-certified organic cotton stretch-knit cover. You can adjust the loft using the zipper.

Naturepedic also has an Adjustable Latex Pillow and a 2-in-1 design with both quilted and stretchy sides. All their products are handmade in Ohio and are free from polyurethane foam, flame retardants, and PFAS.

PineTales Buckwheat Pillows

PineTales brings back the traditional Japanese sobakawa buckwheat pillow. Their pillows use organic hulls that are cleaned in four stages and come in several styles, including a Neck Roll for cervical support. The Hybrid pillow mixes organic hulls with cut latex pieces, so you get the stability of buckwheat and the responsiveness of latex, with less rustling. You can choose from bamboo or Egyptian cotton covers in different sizes.

Turmerry Organic Latex Contour Pillow

Turmerry offers several organic ergonomic pillows. The Latex Contour Pillow has two curves, measuring 4 and 5 inches, and includes an arm channel for side sleepers. All their pillows use GOLS-certified Dunlop latex with organic cotton covers. The Hybrid Pillow has buckwheat hulls on one side and wool on the other, and you can adjust each side.

TALATEX Natural Latex Contour Pillow

TALATEX has an affordable, adjustable ergonomic pillow made with natural latex from Thailand and an organic Tencel cover. The contour design features two curved surfaces at different heights for side and back sleepers. A removable cushion lets you choose from four neck support heights.

With a growing selection of organic pillows to choose from, there’s no need to sleep on the decision. With a little homework, you can find the perfect fit for your needs, from specific materials to the pillow shape that is best for the way you sleep.

Editor’s Note: This article was originally published on March 5, 2019, and was updated with new pillow selection in March 2026.

The post Where to Find Eco-Friendly Ergonomic Pillows appeared first on Earth911.

https://earth911.com/how-and-buy/eco-friendly-ergonomic-pillows/

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Sustainability In Your Ear: Schneider Electric’s Steve Wilhite Maps the Renewable Energy Transition

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The global energy system is changing in two big ways: it is moving from centralized fossil-fuel generation to distributed renewables, and it is becoming more digital in how energy is measured, traded, and optimized. Steve Wilhite, Executive Vice President of Advisory Services at Schneider Electric, works at the intersection of these complementary yet challenging transitions. Schneider supports more than 40% of the Fortune 500 with energy procurement and sustainability strategies, managing over $50 billion in annual energy spending. His experience shows something that pledges and press releases often miss: the biggest challenge for corporate sustainability is not money, technology, or political will. The real issue is the gap between ambition and the ability to deliver. Companies are making Science-Based Targets commitments faster than they are building the infrastructure to meet them. Scope one and two emissions are being managed better, but scope three emissions, which come from a company’s supply chain, still present a systems problem that no single company can solve alone. Schneider’s zero-carbon supplier program suggests what it takes to close this gap. When the company started its own effort to cut emissions from its top 1,000 suppliers by 50% in five years, all 1,000 signed up within two weeks. However, about 84% of them did not fully understand what they had agreed to. Achieving success meant creating measurement tools, education programs, and action plans to help the whole ecosystem, not just individual companies.

Executive Vice President of Advisory Services at Schneider Electric, is our guest on Sustainability In Your Ear.

This critical conversation explores how renewable energy is bought, including the difference between physical and virtual power purchase agreements. Steve also explains why the Power Purchase Agreement (PPA) market became more complex as it grew, and why 10% fewer renewable deals closed in 2025 compared to 2024, as tech companies used up available clean energy. He also addresses a key question in clean energy: is AI helping the environment overall, or do its energy needs still outweigh its efficiency benefits? Schneider processes over a million energy invoices each month, and about 50,000 of them had issues that took 10 to 15 business days to resolve. Now, a team of AI systems can handle these in seconds. Accurate energy consumption and billing data directly affect emissions reporting, energy efficiency, and money-saving market decisions. He describes Schnieder’s approach as “frugal AI”: using the right-sized models for each task, running them on clean energy, and choosing simple solutions over complex ones. Looking ahead, electrification is building a global digital energy network in which every meter and adjustment contributes to a new system independent of central plants. As intelligence spreads, power can shift to consumers, communities, and businesses. Schneider is enabling this shift by building a mesh grid in which each point both produces and consumes energy, coordinated by AI. These changes fundamentally reshape the global energy landscape. The central question: will we intentionally build this new, distributed system, or will we repeat centralized patterns digitally?

To learn more about Schneider Electric’s sustainability efforts, visit se.com.

Interview Transcript

The post Sustainability In Your Ear: Schneider Electric’s Steve Wilhite Maps the Renewable Energy Transition appeared first on Earth911.

https://earth911.com/podcast/sustainability-in-your-ear-schneider-electrics-steve-wilhite-maps-the-renewable-energy-transition/

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The West Is Burning Before Summer Even Starts, and It’s No Accident

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Nevada just shattered its March statewide high temperature record by 6 degrees, which is a ‘72 miles per hour in a school zone’ kind of margin. And it happened during the hottest 11-year stretch in 176 years of recorded temperature tracking.

A mid-March heat wave in the American West pushed temperatures in Laughlin, Nevada, to 106°F, far above the previous March record of 100°F. The fact that this happened in March is alarming, especially since it coincided with a near-total collapse of the region’s snowpack. This sets the stage for an early and possibly severe wildfire season. The heat also fits a troubling trend confirmed by the World Meteorological Organization last week: 2015 through 2025 have been the 11 warmest years ever recorded on Earth.

Usually, temperature records are broken by small amounts. What happened in Nevada last month was very different. Some places broke monthly high temperature records by as much as 8 degrees. Reno had seven days above 80°F in March, compared to the previous record of just two days. “It’s not just that we broke monthly records,” said Nevada State Climatologist Baker Perry, “but it’s by how much we broke the monthly records, and not just in one place.”

A Snow Drought That Wasn’t in the Forecast

The heat wave didn’t hit a typical winter landscape. Nevada was already experiencing what Perry calls an unprecedented snow drought. Even though winter precipitation was close to normal and there were big storms in mid-February, warm, moist air arrived soon after. This caused what the National Weather Service called the second-highest single-day snowmelt ever recorded in the eastern Sierra, only surpassed by flooding in 1997.

Normally, snow melts slowly through April and May, but this year it happened all at once in late February and early March. SNOTEL monitoring stations across Nevada show the impact clearly: 70% of sites in northern and central Nevada now report zero inches of snowpack. That’s not just low—it’s gone. The incidence of drought is closely correlated with rising atmospheric CO2 levels recorded at the Mauna Loa Observatory in Hawaii, which is threatened with defunding by the Trump Administration.

Atmospheric CO2 levels from 2021 to 2026. Source: N.O.A.A.

What worries scientists most is the combination of these events. “To have these two unprecedented, exceptional events happening at once is a combination that is particularly concerning,” Perry said.

What This Means for Fire Season

Wildfire risk isn’t only about heat. It depends on the sequence of conditions leading up to fire season, and this year’s setup is especially dangerous.

The snowmelt and early rains caused plants to grow weeks ahead of schedule. This early growth creates lots of fine fuels. As these plants dry out over the spring—now with less moisture from snowpack—they become the kindling that can fuel fast-moving fires.

Truckee Meadows Fire Protection District Division Chief August Isernhagen said the early green-up could lead to conditions we haven’t seen before as fire season approaches. He urged people to be even more careful than in recent drought years.

“The majority of our starts, and nearly all of our catastrophic fires are human caused,” Isernhagen said in a statement from the University of Nevada, Reno.

Mountain forests face another challenge. Dawn Johnson, Warning Coordination Meteorologist at the NWS in Reno, explained that losing snowpack this early means heavy timber can become drought-stressed much sooner than usual, turning it into a fire hazard months earlier than normal. A cooler storm pattern expected in early April might bring some relief, but experts warn it may be too little, too late to make a real difference.

Eleven Years. No Exceptions.

The Nevada heat wave wasn’t an isolated event. It happened during the longest stretch of global heat ever recorded.

The WMO’s State of the Global Climate 2025 report, released on March 23, confirmed that every year from 2015 to 2025 is among the hottest ever recorded. Depending on the data, 2025 was either the second- or third-warmest year since records began, with temperatures about 1.43°C above pre-industrial levels. Atmospheric CO₂ reached its highest level in 2 million years, and ocean temperatures set a new record for the ninth year in a row.

UN Secretary-General António Guterres put the streak in stark terms: “When history repeats itself eleven times, it is no longer a coincidence. It is a call to act.”

The report also introduced a new measure called Earth’s energy imbalance (EEI). This tracks the difference between the energy the planet receives from the sun and the energy it sends back into space. In 2025, EEI was at its highest since records began in 1960. Surface temperatures, which get most of the attention, only show about 1% of the planet’s extra heat. Over 91% is absorbed by the oceans, which have taken in the equivalent of about 18 times the world’s total annual energy use each year for the past 20 years. EEI gives a clearer picture, showing that the planet is becoming more out of balance.

“In 2025, heatwaves, wildfires, drought, tropical cyclones, storms and flooding caused thousands of deaths, impacted millions of people and caused billions in economic losses,” said WMO Secretary-General Celeste Saulo. She added that the changes driven by human activities “will have harmful repercussions for hundreds — and potentially thousands — of years.”

What’s happening in the Western U.S. matches the WMO’s global findings perfectly. The report highlighted major glacier loss in 2025 along North America’s Pacific coast. These events aren’t separate—they’re both signs of the same warming trend, just showing up in different ways and times.

“We seem to be entering this new era where temperatures will be significantly higher than what they were ten years ago,” said climate scientist Sarah Perkins-Kirkpatrick of Australian National University. She explained that the changes of the past three years can only be explained by climate change.

What About the Cold in the East?

This is where things get both surprising and important.

If you live in the Northeast, Midwest, or Southeast, 2025 might not seem like a record-warm year. Some parts of the eastern U.S. have had cold snaps and severe winter weather that made national news. So how does that fit with 11 straight years of record global heat?

This actually makes sense in climate science. Climate change doesn’t warm every place at the same time. Instead, it disrupts atmospheric patterns like the polar vortex, which usually keeps cold air over the Arctic. As the Arctic warms much faster than the rest of the planet—about four times the global average, according to NOAA—the polar vortex weakens and shifts, letting cold air move into areas that don’t usually get it.

In other words, the same forces causing record heat in Nevada are also behind the unusual cold in the eastern U.S. These aren’t opposites—they’re both results of a destabilized climate system. Weather feels local, but our climate is shared. When the West is hot in March and the East is cold, both are signs of the same disrupted system.

What You Can Do

  • If you live in the West, check current wildfire risk conditions through the National Interagency Fire Center and understand your local evacuation routes and readiness steps before fire season peaks.
  • Lower the risk of starting fires. Most wildfires are caused by people, so be extra careful during high-risk times. Don’t have campfires during bans, avoid dragging chains on your vehicle or trailer, and make sure your equipment doesn’t create sparks.
  • Support climate policy at both the state and federal levels. Reach out to your Congressional representatives. The WMO data shows the trend is clear. The decisions we make now will shape how severe fire seasons are in the future.
  • Cut your home’s carbon footprint by using energy efficiently, choosing cleaner transportation, and making changes to your diet. One person’s actions won’t solve the global problem, but when many people make changes, it can have a real impact on emissions.
  • If you live in the eastern U.S., don’t let cold winters make you ignore climate data. Pay attention to what’s happening across the country—the same atmosphere connects us all.

Related Reading on Earth911

How to Prepare Your Home for Wildfire Season

The post The West Is Burning Before Summer Even Starts, and It’s No Accident appeared first on Earth911.

https://earth911.com/earth-watch/the-west-is-burning-before-summer-even-starts-and-its-no-accident/

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Earth911 Inspiration: The First Step To Sustainability

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Today’s inspiration and photo come from Earth911’s Mitch Ratcliffe: “The first step to sustainability is seeing that there is no boundary between you and nature.” This early morning shot of Waughop Lake in Western Washington caught ground fog between a cloudy sky and a perfect reflection in the water below. There is no difference between us and nature, except for the artificial ones we create by imagining boundaries. When we see this essential connection and reverse the artificial disconnections created over millennia, people can imagine a future where we all thrive with a regenerated ecosystem.

Post and share Earth911 posters to help people think of the planet first, every day. Click the poster to get a larger image.

The post Earth911 Inspiration: The First Step To Sustainability appeared first on Earth911.

https://earth911.com/inspire/earth911-inspiration-the-first-step-to-sustainability/

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