Project – Prop65 Cosmetic Powders

Prop 65 + AB 2762/AB 496 Compliance for Cosmetic Powders (Talc/Asbestos + Metals + Inhalation)

System-Based Compliance. Not Just Testing.

Cosmetic powders operate in one of the most aggressively enforced regulatory spaces in California. Prop 65, AB 2762, AB 496, and mass-tort litigation converge on a category where ingredient sourcing, contamination control, and inhalation exposure must be defensibly documented.

Core reality: “Cosmetic-grade talc” is not a liability shield. Under Prop 65, asbestos has no safe-harbor level, and lead exposure is evaluated against a 0.5 µg/day MADL. Powder products introduce both dermal and inhalation exposure pathways.

Why This Matters

  • High enforcement pressure: cosmetics and personal care remain a top Prop 65 enforcement category.
  • Multi-law exposure: Prop 65 + AB 2762 + AB 496 + retailer standards + tort litigation apply simultaneously.
  • Mass-tort risk: talc/asbestos litigation has produced multi-billion-dollar verdict history.
  • Documentation gap failure: most companies lose defensibility due to missing traceable records—not formulation alone.

Cosmetic Powder Risk Vectors

  • Talc & asbestos co-occurrence: geological overlap creates inherent sourcing risk.
  • Heavy metals: pigments (mica, iron oxides) may introduce Pb, Cd, As at trace levels.
  • Inhalation exposure: airborne particles during use expand exposure modeling complexity.
  • Regulatory pressure shift: California enforcement drives risk expectations.

Why Cosmetic Powders Are Structurally High-Risk

  • Sourcing variability: mineral inputs vary by region and mining controls.
  • Dual exposure pathways: dermal + inhalation increases cumulative exposure analysis.
  • Ingredient blending: multiple mineral inputs compound contamination sources.
  • Daily-use frequency: repeated application elevates modeled exposure.

Compliance is determined by documented exposure assessment—not ingredient marketing.

Business Impact of Non-Compliance

  • 60-Day Notice exposure: rapid legal escalation through private enforcement.
  • Prop 65 penalties: up to $2,500 per violation per day.
  • Mass-tort exposure: litigation risk far exceeds regulatory settlement ranges.
  • Retail delisting pressure: documentation required for continued shelf presence.

What We Deliver

  • Product risk assessment
  • Asbestos & metals testing oversight
  • Exposure evaluation (dermal + inhalation)
  • Compliance determination (warn vs no-warn)
  • Supplier compliance system
  • Banned-ingredient screening (AB 2762 / AB 496)
  • Documentation system
  • Ongoing monitoring

Core Technical Components

  • Asbestos testing: PLM + TEM analysis for talc-bearing materials.
  • Heavy metals testing: ICP-MS evaluation for Pb, Cd, As, Hg.
  • Exposure modeling: inhalation fraction + dermal frequency analysis.
  • Batch traceability: every lot tied to documented compliance decision.
  • Warning determination logic: structured Prop 65 decision framework.

Supply-Chain Compliance Control

  • Supplier attestations
  • Material risk mapping
  • COA validation
  • Corrective action tracking (SCAR)

How It Works

Step 1 — Setup

  • Product intake & categorization
  • Mineral sourcing risk mapping
  • Testing plan design
  • Documentation framework buildout

Step 2 — Implementation

  • ISO/IEC 17025 lab coordination
  • Exposure modeling
  • Compliance determinations
  • Warning label logic setup

Step 3 — Monitoring

  • Monthly batch review
  • Supplier monitoring
  • Trend analysis
  • Audit-ready reporting

Bottom Line — Your Risk Profile

  • High enforcement category: cosmetics remain heavily targeted.
  • Dual hazard structure: asbestos + metals + inhalation exposure.
  • Regulatory stacking: Prop 65 + AB 2762 + AB 496 + tort litigation.
  • Defensibility gap risk: absence of documentation is primary failure point.

Risk is not the ingredient—it is the absence of a defensible system.

Don’t Wait for a 60-Day Notice

Build a defensible cosmetic powder compliance system—talc/asbestos testing, heavy-metal controls, inhalation exposure modeling, banned-ingredient screening, and audit-ready documentation.

Schedule a Compliance Consultation
Prop 65 · AB 2762 · AB 496 · Talc/Asbestos (PLM/TEM) · ICP-MS Metals · Inhalation + Dermal Exposure Modeling

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