Amazon’s toxic double standard exposed
Ahead of the Sixth meeting of the Conference of the Parties to the Minamata Convention on Mercury (COP-6), the Zero Mercury Working Group (ZMWG) has released a new report documenting the ongoing availability of dangerous and often illegal mercury-added skin lightening products (SLPs) on Amazon platforms worldwide.
Despite a recent U.S. State of California legal settlement requiring Amazon.com to enforce its prohibited product policies for toxic SLPs, ZMWG testing shows that Amazon operations across more than 23 countries, serving 100+ markets, continue to allow these products. This amounts to a double standard that disproportionately endangers consumers in the Global South.
Sofia Chávez Arce, Director General of Casa Cem in Mexico City, said: ” Global South citizens must be granted the same right to safe products as Amazon.com customers in the U.S. We are not second-class Amazon customers. Amazon’s double standards are unacceptable.”
ZMWG and its partners in the United States, France, Belgium, India, Mexico and the United Arab Emirates purchased suspect SLPs from Amazon websites earlier this year in their respective countries.
Of the 31 creams tested, 25 were found to contain mercury thousands of times higher than the 1 ppm usual legal limit set by national governments and the “zero mercury” standard set by the Minamata Convention on Mercury.
Michael Bender, ZMWG co-coordinator, said: “We strongly urge Amazon to apply the same Third-Party Seller requirements that it imposes in the U.S., globally. That means requiring testing of SLPs for mercury before they can be offered for sale and adhering to the Amazon Central Seller requirements.”
Tests conducted in Mexico, the United Arab Emirates, and India show that multiple mercury added SLPs remain widely available on Amazon websites, exposing unsuspecting customers to serious risks. In contrast, only a few mercury-added SLPs were found on Amazon websites in the US and in the European Union (EU).
Satish Sinha, Associate Director at the Toxics Link, said: “The continued availability of highly toxic, non-compliant skin lightening creams on Amazon.in is a serious violation of national regulations. Amazon must enforce its prohibited product policies in India to prevent sales of mercury-laden products.”
ZMWG asserts that Amazon platforms worldwide should voluntarily accept full legal responsibility for ensuring that all products sold comply with health, consumer and product safety laws. Anything less, they argue, contradicts Amazon’s claim that it “…strives to be Earth’s most customer-centric company, which includes ensuring that every product available for sale is safe.”
Raphaelle Catte, Mercury Policy Officer at the European Environmental Bureau, said: “These findings echo the EU debate on unsafe product imports via e-commerce. The US Amazon settlement shows that platforms can be part of the solution: requiring independent testing and compliance from third-party sellers is exactly the kind of approach we want to see in the EU.“
Products were tested in accredited laboratories in the EU and the US.
ENDS
The Zero Mercury Working Group
The Zero Mercury Working Group is an international coalition of more than 110 public interest environmental and health non-governmental organisations from over 55 countries around the world, formed in 2005 and coordinated by the European Environmental Bureau and the Mercury Policy Project.
Further information
- ZMWG Poisoning for Profit: Amazon’s double standard, October 2025
- Executive summaries of the report: English, French and Spanish versions
- US State of California Attorney General and citizen enforcers settlement with Amazon
- Amazon.com Seller Central Requirements (only in the US)
- Amazon’s Blueprint for Product Safety
- The Minamata Convention on Mercury Pre-6th Conference of the Parties Online Events
- ZMWG’s Skin Lightening Campaign