Project – Prop65 Dairy Powders

Prop 65 Compliance for Dairy Powders (Heavy Metals + AB 899 Disclosure + Reformulation Roadmap)

A Category Under Disclosure Pressure

Dairy powders are not “just milk.” Spray drying and fractionation concentrate protein-bound contaminants. California’s disclosure regime (AB 899) forces SKU-level transparency while Prop 65 enforces strict exposure thresholds.

Structural enforcement signals:
  • $2,500/day per-violation Prop 65 penalty exposure
  • High NOV frequency in protein and dairy-based powders
  • AB 899 disclosure requirements for infant formula in California
  • Concentration effect amplifies trace contaminants in finished powder

What “Dairy Powders” Includes

  • Sports nutrition: whey isolate, whey concentrate, casein, hydrolysates
  • Infant formula base: lactose, MPC, caseinates, demineralized whey
  • Clinical/medical: MPI/MPC, specialized protein systems
  • Foodservice: NFDM, butter powder, cream powder
  • Cheese powders: seasoning blends, flavored dairy systems
  • Coffee creamers: dairy + oil + emulsifier systems

Prop 65 Chemicals in Dairy Powders

  • Lead: soil → feed → milk concentration pathway (MADL 0.5 µg/day)
  • Cadmium: feed and plant-based blend contamination (MADL 4.1 µg/day)
  • Arsenic: water and feed inputs (MADL 10 µg/day)
  • Aflatoxin M1: feed-to-milk transfer contaminant
  • BPA/BPS: packaging migration (lined cans, pouches)
  • PFAS: packaging and processing aids (emerging)
  • 3-MCPD / GE: oil-containing creamers and blends
  • Furan: thermal processing / spray drying byproduct

The Concentration Effect

Spray drying removes water and concentrates contaminants. This transforms low-level milk exposure into measurable Prop 65 risk.

  • Example: 0.5 µg/L lead in milk → concentrated into whey isolate powder at significantly higher per-serving exposure
  • Serving impact: 25–30 g servings can approach daily MADL thresholds depending on sourcing and processing

AB 899 Disclosure Framework

  • Monthly composite testing (lead, cadmium, arsenic, mercury)
  • Public disclosure of results via CDPH system
  • QR-code labeling for consumer access
  • Minimum 3-year record retention

Core Compliance Levers

Sourcing Control

  • Supplier qualification by region and feed system
  • Risk-tiered sourcing model
  • Lot-level traceability

Testing Program

  • ICP-MS heavy metals (Pb, Cd, As, Hg)
  • Aflatoxin M1 testing (HPLC/LC-MS)
  • Packaging migration testing (BPA/BPS, PFAS)
  • Process contaminant monitoring

Process & Reformulation

  • Spray drying parameter optimization
  • Ingredient substitution (cocoa/plant blends)
  • Packaging liner qualification (PFAS-free systems)

Defensible Documentation File

  • Product formulation & BOM
  • Supplier qualification records
  • Full COA library by lot
  • Exposure assessments (MADL-based)
  • Testing history (≥12 months)
  • AB 899 disclosure logs (if applicable)
  • Packaging migration studies

Implementation Roadmap

  • Phase 1: SKU risk mapping + supplier audit
  • Phase 2: testing program + exposure modeling
  • Phase 3: reformulation + sourcing optimization
  • Phase 4: monitoring + audit-ready system activation

Cost of Non-Compliance

  • $2,500/day per violation exposure
  • $50K–$500K typical settlement range (category-dependent)
  • 60-day response window after notice filing
  • Retail delisting risk for unsupported claims

Don’t Wait for a 60-Day Notice

Build a defensible Prop 65 + AB 899 compliance system for dairy powders—heavy metals testing, supplier control, exposure modeling, packaging migration oversight, and audit-ready documentation.

Schedule a Compliance Diagnostic Call
Prop 65 · AB 899 · Heavy Metals (ICP-MS) · Aflatoxin M1 · Packaging Migration · Spray-Drying Risk

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