Today’s Solutions: December 15, 2025

Steve Birkbeck develops sandalwood cosmetics with the help of Australia’s original people


Ode Editors | March 2006 issue
Steve Birkbeck was a college student majoring in philosophy and anthropology when a car accident in a borrowed vehicle forced him into a job tending bar at a desolate hotel on the edge of Australia’s Gibson Desert. He could hardly wait to save enough money to pay for the car and get back to business as usual.
It didn’t work that way. After his return to the city, several friends he’d made at the hotel tracked Birkbeck down. They wanted to know if he’d lend a hand marketing their emu oil, which Aboriginal people believe is medicinal. So together with his wife Karen, Birkbeck returned to western Australia.
Emus proved problematic, but Birkbeck persevered, founding what has become the country’s largest cosmetics company. Mount Romance specializes in care products made with sandalwood oil using traditional Aboriginal know-how. “So much has already been stolen from the Aboriginals,” Birkbeck says, “and yet we can use their knowledge in a fair way.”
The extract is taken from the trees under the supervision of the Aboriginals, who are responsible for the development of the products. They also teach the history of both emu and sandalwood oils in Australia, and guide groups of tourists interested in experiencing the calming powers of the oils first-hand in a tepee. In addition, five percent of Mount Romance’s sales go to projects that benefit the Aboriginal community via the Songman Circle of Wisdom Foundation, co-founded by Birkbeck and led by internationally renowned Aboriginal artist Richard Walley.
Therapeutic effects, particularly relaxation, have been attributed to sandalwood oil, used for bathing by the Egyptian pharaohs. The oil can also be used for skin care. It’s a basic ingredient used by many European, Arabic and Asian perfume producers (in the United States, Aveda and Estée Lauder buy their sandalwood from Mount Romance). And there’s a lively black market in Asia for illegally harvested sandalwood, another reason why Mount Romance is an important alternative.
 

Print this article
More of Today's Solutions

Scientists build first fully human bone marrow model to revolutionize blood d...

BY THE OPTIMIST DAILY EDITORIAL TEAM In a transformative leap for regenerative medicine, scientists have developed the first entirely human-engineered bone marrow system. This ...

Read More

7 cold and flu season mistakes doctors want you to quit making

BY THE OPTIMIST DAILY EDITORIAL TEAM You’ve heard the warnings: cold and flu season is no joke. But despite our best intentions (and fully ...

Read More

Three ways we can repurpose closed department stores

40 percent of US department stores have closed their doors in the past five years, but the question remains: what do we do with ...

Read More

Hubble takes beautiful image of galaxies “dancing”

The Hubble Space Telescope ventured into space over three decades ago in 1990, and has observed around 50,000 celestial bodies to date. During this ...

Read More