Project – Prop65 Matcha Powder

Prop 65 Compliance for Matcha Powder (Whole-Leaf Exposure + Heavy Metals + Origin/Region Traceability)

Why This Matters

California Prop 65 applies to food—and matcha is uniquely exposed because it is the only tea commonly consumed as a whole leaf powder. That means the consumer ingests the leaf’s full metal load rather than a diluted brew fraction.

Matcha-specific enforcement signals highlighted in the brief:
  • Whole-leaf exposure: matcha consumption delivers the entire powder dose to the consumer
  • Enforcement is aggressive: private lawsuits drive warning enforcement
  • Category already warned: major matcha brands are already carrying Prop 65 lead warnings; unwarned competitors are exposed
  • Documentation is your defense: defensible records end threats cheaply

Prop 65 Enforcement Trends (2024–2026)

The brief emphasizes that enforcement is increasing, not slowing down.

  • 2023: ~3,200 NOVs
  • 2024: ~4,100 NOVs
  • 2025: ~5,000 NOVs
  • 2026 (projected): ~5,800 NOVs
  • ~38% — food & supplements share (largest single category in 2025)
  • ~$86M — 2026 settlements (majority paid to attorneys)

Why Matcha Powder Is at Risk

The brief frames matcha risk as a compounding chain: environmental loading + agronomic practices + processing + whole-leaf ingestion.

  • Soil & air: tea leaves can absorb lead from both soil and air pollution
  • Shading: 3–4 weeks of shading increases root uptake of metals
  • Grinding: stone mills pulverize the whole leaf into powder
  • Whole leaf: 100% of leaf metals ingested vs ~20–30% extraction in brewed tea
Two bottom-line points from the brief:
  • Origin is the biggest lever—whole-leaf consumption amplifies every microgram
  • “Naturally occurring” is not defensible when atmospheric deposition is a source (per the brief)

Primary Chemicals of Concern (From the Brief)

  • Lead (Pb) — MADL 0.5 µg/day
  • Cadmium (Cd) — MADL 4.1 µg/day
  • Inorganic Arsenic — NSRL 10 µg/day
  • Mercury (Hg) — MADL 0.3 µg/day

The brief also flags independent lab testing (2025) indicating matcha can test above Prop 65 thresholds across multiple metals.

Business Impact of Non-Compliance

  • 60-Day Notice of Violation: plaintiff files with the AG; response clock starts immediately
  • Settlement exposure: typical settlements $20K–$100K+ per action, plus attorney fees
  • Relabeling & reformulation: product pull risk, warning labels added, sourcing reviewed
  • Retail & distributor pressure: buyers demand evidence of compliance before reinstatement/renewal

Most companies settle—not because they’re guilty, but because documentation is weak.

What We Deliver

An end-to-end Prop 65 compliance program—not a one-time report.

  • Product risk assessment
  • Chemical testing oversight
  • Exposure evaluation
  • Compliance determination
  • Warning label strategy
  • Supplier compliance program
  • Documentation system
  • Ongoing monitoring

Each component is documented, traceable, and audit-ready.

Core Technical Components

  • Heavy metal testing (ISO/IEC 17025): Pb (MADL 0.5 µg/day), Cd (MADL 4.1 µg/day), Inorganic As (NSRL 10 µg/day), Hg (MADL 0.3 µg/day)
  • Exposure vs MADL evaluation: serving-size, daily exposure, and averaging calculations to determine whether a warning is required
  • Supplier COA verification: origin-region (e.g., Uji, Nishio, Kagoshima), tea-garden, stone-grind lot, and packaging supplier COAs cross-checked against screening thresholds
  • Batch-level compliance review: every lot logged, reviewed, and tied to a compliance determination on file
  • Warning label determination: clear “warn vs no-warn” logic documented and defensible against private enforcement

Supply-Chain Compliance Control

Prevent the issue upstream—before it reaches your label.

  • Supplier attestation: certifications and declarations collected from every raw-material vendor
  • Raw-material risk mapping: inputs classified by heavy-metal exposure profile
  • COA tracking: every batch COA verified against screening thresholds
  • Corrective action (SCAR): supplier corrective actions logged, verified, and closed out

The SystemsBuilder Approach (Artifacts vs Records)

  • Artifacts (you pay): build the structure once (testing program, exposure framework, supplier controls)
  • Records (no added cost): unlimited batch test results and determinations generated under the same structure

Build once. Use forever. Scalable, predictable, cost-efficient.

How It Works (Three Phases)

Step 1 — Setup

  • Product intake & scoping
  • Risk identification by category
  • Testing plan creation
  • Documentation structure

Step 2 — Implementation

  • Lab coordination (ISO/IEC 17025)
  • Exposure & MADL calculations
  • Compliance determination
  • Warning-label decisions

Step 3 — Monitoring

  • Monthly compliance oversight
  • Batch & lot review
  • Trend analysis
  • Audit-ready reporting

Pricing (From the Brief)

  • Compliance system setup: $1,500 (up to 3 finished products) + $150 each additional finished product
  • Monthly monitoring: $500/month (up to 7 finished products) + $50/month per additional finished product
  • Testing monitoring fees: $35 per testing monitoring event (per lot/batch)

Laboratory testing fees are not included; testing is conducted by independent ISO 17025 accredited laboratories billed directly by the laboratory.

What You Receive

  • Batch compliance review reports: pass/fail determination, threshold comparison, reviewer sign-off
  • Monthly summary reports: rolling snapshot of testing events, compliance status, and open action items
  • Compliance monitoring logs: date-stamped log of every decision made
  • Supplier tracking records: attestations, COAs, risk ratings, and corrective actions by supplier
  • Audit-ready documentation: packaged for OAG inquiries, retailer audits, and legal counsel on short notice

Bottom Line — Your Risk Profile

  • #1 enforcement target: food & supplements are the largest Prop 65 enforcement category
  • Top litigation driver: heavy metals (lead, cadmium, mercury, arsenic) documented above thresholds in matcha testing (per brief)
  • Whole-leaf exposure risk: matcha delivers 100% of the leaf’s metal load vs brewed tea extraction (~20–30%)
  • Strict environment: California’s private-enforcement regime is the most aggressive in the U.S.

Build a Defensible Multi-Framework Compliance System for Your Face Powder Portfolio

Matcha’s whole-leaf exposure profile makes country/region traceability, ISO 17025 heavy-metal testing oversight, and defensible exposure math non-negotiable. Build the system now—so if a notice arrives, you already have the file.

Schedule a Compliance Consultation
Prop 65 · Matcha Powder · Whole-Leaf Exposure · Heavy Metals (Pb/Cd/Inorganic As/Hg) · Supplier COAs · Batch Review · Defensible Records

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