Mercury-laden cosmetic products still being sold in 19 PH cities


The Ecowaste Coalition urged 19 mayors of cities in Metro Manila and other parts of the country to ensure the safety of their constituents from rom health-damaging mercury exposures that can be found on cosmetics.

In a statement, the toxic watchdog group sent a letter to the city mayors about the continuous proliferation of hazardous cosmetic products in their respective areas based on its monitoring.

photo: EcoWaste Coalition

“We’ve reached out to our mayors soon after their installation to alert them about this recurring public health and safety issue demanding their attention. As chief executives of their respective cities, we urge them to take active steps to prevent the exposure of their constituents, especially women of child-bearing age, to mercury in cosmetics," said Aileen Lucero, National Coordinator, EcoWaste Coalition.

Mercury in skin lightening cosmetics is released through usual product use with dermal absorption and inhalation as common exposure routes. It can cause skin discoloration, rashes and scarring, and reduce skin’s resistance to bacterial and fungal infections. Repeated applications can harm the kidneys, the brain and the central nervous system.

The use of mercury-containing skin lightening products by pregnant women is of utmost concern as mercury is known to cross the placenta during pregnancy and accumulate in fetal tissues, affecting the developing brain and nervous system of the baby in the womb and causing neuro-developmental disorders.

“While we found fewer brands of mercury-laden facial creams compared to the study we did in 2015 covering 50 cities, the results of our latest market investigation indicate that the smuggling of such forbidden products has not ceased; hence the need for stringent customs controls and local government interventions,” she added.

Test buy operations conducted by the group in over 25 local government units (LGUs) from March to June 2022 indicate the availability of mercury-containing skin whitening cosmetics in retail stores despite laws prohibiting their production and trade.

Among the banned cosmetics sold in beauty product stores, as well as in online shopping platforms, are Goree Beauty Cream with Lycopene and Goree Day & Night Beauty Cream, which the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) banned in 2017, the group said.

In pursuit of the general welfare provision under the Local Government Code, the EcoWaste Coalition requested the various city authorities to:

--- constitute a team that will look into the EcoWaste Coalition’s report;
--- conduct law enforcement activities, including random store inspection and confiscation of banned products and their safe disposal;
--- enact an ordinance banning and penalizing the manufacture, importation, distribution and sale of mercury-containing cosmetics; and to
--- promote the “Brown Is Beautiful” campaign to instill appreciation and acceptance of one’s natural skin color.

In their letters to the mayors, the EcoWaste Coalition pointed out that the unrelenting sale of mercury-containing cosmetics goes against the objective of the Minamata Convention, a legally-binding treaty that aims to protect the human health and the environment from anthropogenic emissions and releases of mercury and mercury compounds.

This treaty, among other provisions, stipulates for the phase-out in 2020 of the manufacture, import or export of cosmetics such as skin lightening creams and soaps with mercury content above 1 ppm.

The group also said that the sale of such products violates the Consumer Act of the Philippines (RA 7394 prohibits adulterated cosmetics or those containing any poisonous or deleterious substance) and the Food and Drug Administration Act (RA 9711 prohibits health products, including cosmetics, that are adulterated, unregistered or misbranded).