As an Amazon seller I can tell you that there's no way in the world they would let him store that much flamable material in their warehouse, no matter how many hoops he jumped thru. This reminds me of all those idiots a few years ago who bought Disney merch before realizing Disney is banned by 3rd party sellers on Amazon.
Amazon will make you jump thru tons of hoops to store flamable material in their warehouse. Whoever manufactured the product has to certify exactly what chemicals are in it. Thats the only way they will approve anything at all flamable to be stored and shipped. You basically have to have an invoice for each sku. And they charge you about 3x for storage space.
Try selling (used) Lego products on Amazon as a 3rd party. Hint: you have to pay a $10k fee to Lego to get approved. Same thing for Underarmor. Try this with certain brands and see how fast your Amazon seller account gets banned.
You bought those things from someone who is approved to sell grocery products on Amazon, not those specific brands.
As an Amazon seller I can tell you that there's no way in the world they would let him store that much flamable material in their warehouse, no matter how many hoops he jumped thru. This reminds me of all those idiots a few years ago who bought Disney merch before realizing Disney is banned by 3rd party sellers on Amazon.
I didnt know there was a rule on that.. is that a OSHA thing? I guess he doesnt give a fuck about safety.
Amazon will make you jump thru tons of hoops to store flamable material in their warehouse. Whoever manufactured the product has to certify exactly what chemicals are in it. Thats the only way they will approve anything at all flamable to be stored and shipped. You basically have to have an invoice for each sku. And they charge you about 3x for storage space.
Try selling (used) Lego products on Amazon as a 3rd party. Hint: you have to pay a $10k fee to Lego to get approved. Same thing for Underarmor. Try this with certain brands and see how fast your Amazon seller account gets banned.
You bought those things from someone who is approved to sell grocery products on Amazon, not those specific brands.