| Clove oil |

Last updated: 14/02/2026
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(Also known as: Essential clove oil; Eugenol; Clove bud oil) |
The following Pesticide Hazard Tricolour (PHT) alerts are based on the data in the tables below. An absence of an alert does not imply the substance has no implications for human health, biodiversity or the environment but just that we do not have the data to form a judgement. The alerts for Highly Hazardous Pesticides (HHPs) are based on applying the FAO/WHO (Type 1) and the PAN (Type II) criteria to PPDB data. Further details on the HHP indicators are given in the tables below. Neither the PHT nor the HHP hazard alerts take account of usage patterns or exposure, thus they do not represent risk.
| PHT: Environmental fate |
PHT: Ecotoxicity |
PHT: Human health |
Highly Hazardous Pesticide |
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A plant-based oil, of which the main consituents are eugenol and 4-allyl-2-methoxyphenol, which has fungicidal, herbicidal and insecticidal activity. |
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Rots (Gloeosporium spp,); Mold (Penicillium spp.); Pear psyllids (Cacopsylla chinensis); Poison ivy (Rhus radicans L.); Ants; Rodents; Cockroaches; Root knot nematodes |
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Apple; Pear; Cucumber; Tomato; Melon; Vegetable crops; Ornamentals; Domestic situations |
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Efficacy demonstrated via field rials. |
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- |
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Class: Magnoliopsida; Order: Myrtales; Order: Myrtaceae |
| EC Regulation 1107/2009 (repealing 91/414) |
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Approved |
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Malta |
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31/01/2026 |
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No |
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Yes |
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ATAustria |
BEBelgium |
BGBulgaria |
CYCyprus |
CZCzech Republic |
DEGermany |
DKDenmark |
EEEstonia |
ELGreece |
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✓ |
✓ |
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✓ |
ESSpain |
FIFinland |
FRFrance |
HRCroatia |
HUHungary |
IEIreland |
ITItaly |
LTLithuania |
LULuxembourg |
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✓ |
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✓ |
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LVLatvia |
MTMalta |
NLNetherlands |
PLPoland |
PTPortugal |
RORomania |
SESweden |
SISlovenia |
SKSlovakia |
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ISIceland |
NONorway |
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Clove oil, as a complex mixture, contains isomeric compounds. The most notable are eugenine that is thought to be isomeric with eugenic acid, and caryophyllene which is a sesquiterpene found in clove oil that is isomeric with camphor. |
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VEEIFXWJNCAVEQ-FYZOBXCZSA-N |
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Yes |
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Insecticide; Herbicide; Fungicide; Rodenticide; Nematicide; Other substance |
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Bactericide |
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Plant-derived substance; Plant oil |
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>800 g kg⁻¹ eugenol |
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- |
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Natural; Complex mixture |
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Contact, non-selective, causes breakdown of cell structure |
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Plant oil from the buds, leaves and stem of clove (Eugenia caryophyllus, Syzygium aromaticum, Caryophyllus aromaticus Spreng) plants |
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Clove oil is almost entirely comprised of a single phenylpropanoid, eugenol (70-85%), supported by a small set of structurally related compounds such as eugenyl acetate (5-15%), beta caryophyllene (5–12%) and alpha humulene (0.5–2%). |
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Harvest and crop protection |
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Gloeosporium spp,; Penicillium spp.; Cacopsylla chinensis; Poison ivy (Rhus radicans L.); Ants; Rodents; Cockroaches; Root knot nematodes |
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Apple; Pear; Cucumber; Tomato; Melon; Vegetable crops; Ornamentals; Domestic situations |
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IFM - where regulatory approvals exist |
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84961-50-2 |
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8000-34-8 |
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284-638-7 |
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906 |
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clove oil |
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| UK Poisons List Order 1972 |
Rotterdam Convention |
Montreal Protocol |
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| Stockholm Convention |
OSPAR |
EU Water Framework Directive |
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Highly phytotoxic; FEMA=2323/2325; FLAVIS=09.11; USEPA minimum risk pesticide |
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Not applicable |
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Not applicable |
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Not known |
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Not applicable |
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- |
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Pale yellow oily liquid that is a complex chemical mixture which includes eugenol (~80-95%), beta-caryophyllene (~5-17%) and alpha-humulene (~2%) |
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Current |
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- Xeda International
- Ecosmart
- St Gabriel Laboratories
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- Bioxeda
- Matran EC
- Poison Ivy Defoliant
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Usually applied as a post-harvest drench. The commercial product is an oil emulsion. |
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Commercial production of clove oil begins with harvesting the unopened flower buds of the Syzygium aromaticum tree. The buds are carefully handpicked and sun-dried to enhance their aroma and oil content. Once dried, the buds undergo steam distillation, the most common extraction method, where steam releases volatile compounds that are condensed and separated into clove oil and hydrosol. The oil is then refined through filtration or fractional distillation to remove impurities and concentrate its active components, primarily eugenol. |
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Data for specific plant oils is scarce. However, from publicly available data the carbon footprint of plant oils has been estimated at between 1.0 and 4.0 kg CO₂e per kg of oil. This depends on the plant oil content, agricultural practices and processing methods used. |
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2170 |
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High |
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Miscible |
Ethanol |
- |
| Miscible |
Methanol |
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| Miscible |
Ether |
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| Miscible |
Chloroform |
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-21.2 |
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232.9 |
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121 |
Eugenol |
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1.10 X 1002 |
Calculated |
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2.04 |
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Low |
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1.04 |
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10 |
at 25 °C |
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12200 |
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Highly volatile. If applied directly to plants or soil, drift is a concern & mitigation is advisable |
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0.9 |
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Moderately volatile |
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35.1 |
undiluted |
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Readily biodegradable |
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1.08 |
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Non-persistent |
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2.09 |
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Non-persistent |
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1.08 |
Geometric mean |
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EU 2021 dossier Lab studies DT₅₀ (normalised) range 0.99-1.16 days, Soils=4 |
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As this parameter is not normally measured directly, a surrogate measure is used: ‘Photochemical oxidative DT₅₀’. Where data is available, this can be found in the Fate Indices section below. |
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| Soil adsorption and mobility |
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None
| Terrestrial ecotoxicology |
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> 1930 |
Rat as Eugenol |
Moderate |
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> 1000 |
Eisenia foetida |
Low |
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> 1000 |
Eisenia foetida |
Low |
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Nitrogen mineralisation: No significant adverse effect |
Dose 112.5 mg product/kg soil 28 Day |
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34.45 |
Folsomia candida as Eugenol |
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8.34 |
Folsomia candida as Eugenol |
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33.45 |
Aphidius rhopalosiphi as Eugenol |
Moderate |
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7.5 |
Oncorhynchus mykiss as Eugenol |
Moderate |
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13.0 |
Danio rerio as Eugenol |
Moderate |
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1.9 |
Daphnia magna as Eugenol |
Moderate |
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41.0 |
Desmodesmus subspicatus as Eugenol |
Low |
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| Regulatory Threshold Levels (RTLs) |
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Note: These RTLs have been calculated using the regulatory approach used in the European Union and based on ecotoxocity values in the PPDB.
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193 |
Worst case of acute and chronic mammals |
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No data |
No data for acute and chronic birds |
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200 |
Worst case of acute and chronic earthworms |
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No data |
No data for non-target plants vegetative vigour and seedling emergence |
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No data |
No data for contact and oral honeybees |
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16.725 |
Worst case of parasitic wasps and predatory mites |
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0.075 |
Worst case of temperate acute and chronic fish |
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0.019 |
Worst case of temperate acute and chronic aquatic invertebrates |
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4.1 |
Worst case of free-floating plants, rooted plants, acute and chronic algae |
| HUMAN HEALTH AND PROTECTION |
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Low (class I) |
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> 1930 |
Rat as Eugenol |
Moderate |
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1.0 |
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None allocated |
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None allocated |
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1.0 |
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25-70 |
concentration dependent |
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Acceptable for proposed uses |
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Acceptable for proposed uses |
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Rapid and extensive urinary excretion approx.94.5 % within 24 h in humans |
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| Carcinogen |
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Endocrine disruptor |
XNo, known not to cause a problem |
A0 A = Chromosome aberration (EFSA database) 0 = No data ; B0 B = DNA damage/repair (EFSA database) 0 = No data ; C0 C = Gene mutation (EFSA database) 0 = No data ; D0 D = Genome mutation (EFSA database) 0 = No data ; E0 E = Unspecified genotoxicity type (miscellaneous data source) 0 = No data |
No data found |
| Reproduction / development effects |
Acetyl cholinesterase inhibitor |
Neurotoxicant |
| No data found |
No data found |
✓Yes, known to cause a problem |
| Respiratory tract irritant |
Skin irritant |
Skin sensitiser |
✓Yes, known to cause a problem |
✓Yes, known to cause a problem |
✓Yes, known to cause a problem |
| Eye irritant |
Phototoxicant |
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✓Yes, known to cause a problem |
No data found |
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Major consitituent Eugenol may be a skin sensitiser; Toxic Cytotoxic Potential liver toxicant May cause acute respiratory distress at high doses CNS depression at high doses |
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Not highly flammable Not explosive or oxidising |
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Health: H302, H315, H319, H317 |
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Not listed (Not listed) |
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clove oil |
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Huile essentielle de Clous de Girofle |
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| Record last updated: |
14/02/2026 |
| Contact: |
aeru@herts.ac.uk |
| Please cite as: |
Lewis, K.A., Tzilivakis, J., Warner, D. and Green, A. (2016) An international database for pesticide risk assessments and management. Human and Ecological Risk Assessment: An International Journal, 22(4), 1050-1064. DOI: 10.1080/10807039.2015.1133242 |
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