Prop 65 Compliance for Fish Oil Supplements (PCBs + Dioxins/Furans + Methylmercury + GOED-Equivalent Defensibility)
Download the Fish Oil Supplements Prop 65 Compliance Project Brief (PDF)
Why Fish Oil Sits at the Heart of Prop 65
Fish oil is the most-litigated supplement category in Prop 65 history. The category’s plaintiff playbook was established by the 2010 Manthey v. CVS Pharmacy case, which named multiple brands and retailers and created a repeatable enforcement template focused on PCBs.
- 2010 landmark suit: Manthey v. CVS Pharmacy created the enforcement template for supplement PCB cases
- 90 ng/day — PCB cancer NSRL under Prop 65
- GOED consent judgment (Feb 2012): established category limits for signatories, not the entire market
Fish Oil Is a Proven, Ongoing Target
The brief emphasizes that omega‑3 enforcement continues, especially for brands outside the GOED consent judgment. PCBs and related fat-bound contaminants can vary dramatically by species, origin, and refining method.
- PCB cancer NSRL: 90 ng/day (orders of magnitude below FDA’s 2 ppm food tolerance)
- Brand-to-brand spread: products tested across the market ranged roughly 12 ng to 850+ ng PCB per dose (origin/refining drive the delta)
- Target set: PCBs, dioxins/furans, and methylmercury drive omega‑3 enforcement
How Contamination Reaches the Capsule
Ocean sediment → fish fat → crude oil → refined product. Each stage is a control point, but the brief is clear: fish oil is the fat contaminants concentrate in—and refining is the only real defense.
- Ocean sources: PCBs, dioxins, and methylmercury persist from legacy industrial pollution
- Fish fat uptake: lipophilic contaminants bioaccumulate in fat—the same fat extracted for omega‑3
- Crude fish oil: contains full contaminant load before refining
- Refined capsule: molecular distillation can reduce PCBs 90%+, but only if executed and verified per lot
Inside the Benchmark, or Outside It?
The brief distinguishes between GOED-consent-judgment signatories and non-signatory brands. For non-signatories, plaintiffs may argue a “default-zero” approach unless you can prove a defensible safe-harbor position.
- GOED-settlement brands: operate with settlement limits, consent-based protection, and standardized testing options
- Non-signatory brands: face “default-zero” arguments; burden of proof shifts to the brand; limits can be re-litigated case by case
A private compliance system can replicate GOED-level defensibility without requiring membership—by building the documentation and per-lot verification a plaintiff discovery request expects.
Business Impact of Non-Compliance
- 60-Day Notice of Violation: 15+ years of plaintiff infrastructure targeting fish oil makes enforcement highly repeatable
- Multi-defendant settlement range: settlements can run $25K–$150K per SKU (multi-SKU portfolios multiply exposure)
- Retailer pressure: Whole Foods, Sprouts, CVS, and Amazon require documented compliance for omega‑3 listings
- Premium brand damage: “pharmaceutical‑grade,” “purified,” and “clean” claims are undercut by defensive warnings
Why Prop65Compliance.com
- Compliance-focused: we don’t litigate—we build the system that prevents litigation
- System-based approach: testing a single batch doesn’t protect you; a per-lot documented program does
- Managed by Consultare Inc. Group: operational oversight from a dedicated compliance management team
- Built on SystemsBuilder + InterlinkIQ: artifact-based system, document control, and AI-assisted workflows
What We Deliver
An end-to-end Prop 65 program calibrated to the most-litigated supplement category—documented, traceable, and audit-ready per lot, per species, per refiner.
- Species-level risk assessment
- PCB, dioxin & Hg testing oversight
- Per-dose exposure math
- Compliance determination
- Warning label strategy
- Supplier & refiner program
- Documentation system
- Ongoing monitoring
Core Technical Components
- PCB congener panel: 209-congener PCB analysis (USEPA Method 1668C) aligned to Prop 65’s 90 ng/day PCB cancer NSRL and dioxin-like PCB limits
- Dioxin & furan TEQ analysis: 2,3,7,8‑TCDD toxic equivalency quotient (USEPA 1613) consistent with consent-judgment defensibility expectations
- Methylmercury speciation: total Hg and methylmercury (the toxicologically relevant form for reproductive-toxicity exposure math)
- Species & origin documentation: small cold-water fish vs larger species have different contamination profiles
- Per-lot compliance file: species inputs, crude-oil COA, post-distillation verification, final-product determination, warning decision
Boat-to-Bottle Supply-Chain Control
Species, origin, and refining method drive the contamination profile—compliance tracks all three.
- Species & origin: each origin/species has a distinct contaminant profile
- Refiner qualification: molecular distillation capability, contaminant stripping verification, and GMP documentation
- Per-lot COA tracking: crude-oil and finished-oil COAs verified per lot; refining claims must be documented, not assumed
- Supplier CAPA: out-of-spec lots trigger corrective actions (supplier rotation, re-distillation, or lot rejection)
The SystemsBuilder Approach (Artifacts vs Records)
Artifact-based compliance is built once and scales across every lot and every species input. You pay for the structure—not the records.
- Artifact (you pay): PCB/Dioxin Verification Program defining how every species, refiner, and lot is screened and documented
- Records (no added cost): per-lot, per-SKU records generated within the same framework
How It Works (Three Phases)
Step 01 — Setup
- SKU & species scoping
- Refiner & origin mapping
- Testing plan per lot
- Documentation structure
Step 02 — Implementation
- Lab coordination (ISO/IEC 17025)
- PCB, dioxin, Hg testing
- Per-lot determination
- Warning-label decisions
Step 03 — Monitoring
- Monthly compliance oversight
- Per-lot & per-refiner review
- Refiner-change re-determinations
- Audit-ready reporting
Pricing (As Presented in the Brief)
Compliance System Setup (One-Time Investment)
- $1,500 — up to 3 omega-3 SKUs
- + $150 — each additional SKU (concentration / form / blend)
Setup includes: species-level risk assessment, PCB/dioxin/Hg testing program, per-dose exposure framework, documentation system setup, and compliance determination structure.
Monthly Monitoring (Ongoing Oversight)
- $500/month — up to 7 SKUs
- + $50/month — per additional SKU
Monitoring includes: per-lot test review, refiner-change re-determinations, monthly reporting, and trend analysis by refiner. Cancel anytime. No long-term contracts.
Testing Monitoring Fees (Per-Event Oversight)
- $35 per testing monitoring event (per lot / per analyte)
- Lab fees excluded: testing performed by independent ISO/IEC 17025 accredited laboratories; lab costs billed directly by the laboratory
What You Receive
- Per-lot compliance determinations: PCB/dioxin/Hg review with pass/fail determination and reviewer sign-off
- Monthly summary reports: snapshot of SKUs, refiner trends, testing events, and open action items
- Compliance monitoring logs: date-stamped log of every decision made
- Refiner & species records: attestations, COAs, distillation verification, corrective actions by supplier and species
- Audit-ready documentation: packaged for OAG inquiries, retailer audits, and Amazon compliance requests on short notice
Built for Defensibility
The 2010 lawsuit’s burden-of-proof standard still applies to non-GOED brands today—defensibility is documentation plus verified testing.
- Documented due diligence: every lot determination has a record, a reviewer, and a date
- Verified lab testing: ISO/IEC 17025 PCB, dioxin, and methylmercury results (no conflicts of interest)
- Traceable decisions: species → refiner → crude lot → finished lot → determination
- Structured system: a real management system plaintiff attorneys recognize
Managed Service vs. DIY
- Managed service (Consultare Inc. Group): hands-off execution, expert-managed refiner monitoring, monthly reporting; best for non-GOED brands scaling into California retail
- DIY (SystemsBuilder.pro): self-managed execution with artifact library access; best for established brands with in-house QA depth
Your Risk Profile
- Documented precedent: the 2010 multi-defendant lawsuit created a proven plaintiff playbook
- Fat-bound toxins: PCBs, dioxins, and methylmercury concentrate in fish fat—the product is the concentrator
- Consent-judgment gap: outside the GOED settlement, plaintiffs may argue default-zero thresholds unless you establish your own safe-harbor file
- Brand exposure: “pharmaceutical-grade” positioning is directly undercut by “just-in-case” warnings
Build a Defensible Multi-Framework Compliance System for Your Face Powder Portfolio
Build GOED-level defensibility for fish oil supplements through per-lot PCB/dioxin/Hg oversight, traceable species/origin/refiner controls, documented determinations, and audit-ready records—so you’re prepared before a 60-day notice arrives.
Schedule a Compliance Consultation
