EcoWaste warns cosmetics consumers on mercury content of 15 products


The EcoWaste Coalition warned the public against the presence of mercury in some 15 facials creams that were found to being sold in some parts of Metro Manila.

Instead of light skin as what some Filipino consumers intended to achieve, the toxics watchdog group said they may end up having damage in the kidneys, skin rashes, skin discoloration and scarring.

photo: EcoWaste Coalition

In a statement, the EcoWaste Coalition said the 15 cosmetic products are sold for P100 to P250 each last December 8 from retailers in Manila, Parañaque and Pasay Cities.

“We did our latest test purchase to draw attention to the urgency of effectively enforcing the mercury ban in cosmetics in the ASEAN region and across the world,” said Thony Dizon, Chemical Safety Campaigner, EcoWaste Coalition.

“Despite the global ban on their manufacture, import or export, unscrupulous traders continue to bring in mercury-containing whitening and anti-aging creams from abroad, especially from China and Pakistan, which are also sold in online shopping platforms,” he said.

photo: EcoWaste Coalition

The EcoWaste Coalition screened the items for mercury using an advanced Olympus Vanta M Series X-Ray Fluorescence (XRF) analyzer, a handheld device that can provide accurate, non-destructive and rapid element analysis.

Based on the XRF screening performed on December 9, all 15 cosmetic products were found to contain excessive levels of mercury beyond the 1 ppm limit set by the ASEAN Cosmetic Directive and the Minamata Convention on Mercury.

Mercury, according to the group, also reduces skin’s resistance to bacterial and fungal infections.

The group said mercury in cosmetics is eventually discharged into wastewater, contributing to mercury pollution in the aquatic systems. It is likewise released into the environment when containers of mercury-containing cosmetics are disposed of, mixed with ordinary trash, landfilled or incinerated.

At the top of the list with mercury content in excess of 10,000 ppm were Goree Day & Night Beauty Cream with 25,530 ppm of mercury, followed by Goree Beauty Cream with 25,390 ppm, AQME Beauty Cream with 18,710 ppm, Feique Herbal Extract Whitening Anti-Freckle Set with 16,280 ppm, Parley Beauty Cream with 15,130 ppm, and Golden Pearl Beauty Cream with 10,430 ppm.

Also found to contain violative levels of mercury were Collagen Plus Vit E Day & Night Cream with 5,689 ppm of mercury, Morning Face Beauty Cream with 3,148 ppm, Safora Beauty Cream with 4,715 ppm, S’Zitang with 1,961 ppm, Jiaoli 7-Day Specific Eliminating Freckle AB Set with 1,784 ppm, S’Zitang 10-Day Eliminating Freckle Day & Night Set with 1,755 ppm, S’Zitang 7-Day Specific Eliminating Freckle AB Set with1,694 ppm, Yang Qian Fashion Care Skin Strong Whitening & Spot Removing Package with 1,177 ppm, and Jiaoli Miraculous Cream with 848 ppm.

As part of its non-stop advocacy, the EcoWaste Coalition shared via its Facebook and Twitter accounts infographics informing consumers about the hazards of mercury in cosmetics to public health and the environment,

The ASEAN Cosmetic Scientific Body (ACSB) earlier adopted the one part per million (ppm) contamination limit for mercury in cosmetics at their 8th meeting on December 10 to 11, 2007, which the ASEAN Cosmetic Committee (ACC) subsequently endorsed on December 12-13 of the same year, along with the 5 ppm and 20 ppm contamination limits for arsenic and lead, respectively. Mercury and its compounds are listed in Annex II of the ASEAN Cosmetic Directive, or the “list of substances which must not form part of the composition of cosmetic products.”

As part of its non-stop advocacy, the EcoWaste Coalition shared via its Facebook and Twitter accounts infographics informing consumers about the hazards of mercury in cosmetics to public health and the environment wand with the following messages to the consumers:


--- Protect yourself from mercury exposure by not using mercury-containing anti-aging and whitening cosmetics.
--- Love your skin as it is, and stand up against colorism (discrimination based on skin color).

--- If you can’t resist lightening your skin tone, only use authorized products and reject those that contain mercury, hydroquinone and other chemicals dangerous to health.

From 2010-2021, the FDA has banned over 140 brands of skin whitening cosmetics for containing mercury and/or for lacking the required market authorization, including over 85 items discovered by the EcoWaste Coalition through its periodic market surveillance and chemical screening activities since 2011.

EcoWaste also urged concerned health, customs, local government and police authorities to put the ban on mercury in cosmetics in force.