Personal-care and fragrance firms looking to innovate or address inefficiencies in their businesses should consider how nature solves similar problems, Biomimicry 3.8's Green Chemistry Naturalist Mark Dorfman suggested Nov. 15 at the 46th Annual Meeting of the Research Institute for Fragrance Materials. On its website, Missoula, Mont.-based Biomimicry 3.8 describes biomimicry as an evolving discipline that involves "learning from and then emulating natural forms, processes and ecosystems to create more sustainable designs."
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