New study links major fashion brands to Amazon deforestation
LVMH, Zara, Nike and others at risk of contribution to destruction of rainforest based on connections to leather industry
Laura
Pitcher
Mon 29 Nov
2021 14.00 GMT
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2021/nov/29/fashion-industry-amazon-rainforest-deforestation
New
research into the fashion industry’s complex global supply chains shows that a
number of large fashion brands are at risk of contributing to deforestation in
the Amazon rainforest, based on their connections to tanneries and other
companies involved in the production of leather and leather goods.
The report,
released Monday, analyzed nearly 500,000 rows of customs data and found that
brands such as Coach, LVMH, Prada, H&M, Zara, Adidas, Nike, New Balance,
Teva, UGG and Fendi have multiple connections to an industry that props up
Amazon deforestation.
More than
50 brands have multiple supply-chain links to the largest Brazilian leather
exporter, JBS, which is known to engage in Amazon deforestation. JBS recently
made a commitment to achieve zero deforestation across its global supply chain
by 2035, something environmental groups have called insufficient.
The study
was conducted by Stand.earth, a supply chain research firm. The findings are
surprising, in part because a number of the brands surveyed have recently
announced policies to untangle themselves from actors along the supply chain
that contribute to deforestation.
“With a third
of companies surveyed having some kind of policy in place, [you’d expect] that
would have an impact on deforestation,” said Greg Higgs, one of the researchers
involved in the report. “The rate of deforestation is increasing, so the
policies have no material effect.”
The
researchers hope to one day expand to other industries that rely heavily on
leather, like the automotive sector.
In 2019 and
2020, Brazil faced criticism from world leaders for not doing more to protect
the forest from raging wildfires. Deforestation in the critical ecosystem
continues at an alarming rate. Research has shown that the cattle industry is
the single largest driver of deforestation of the Amazon rainforest and the
fashion industry is animportant cog in the leather exportation machine.
In fact,
projections show that in order to keep supplying consumers with wallets,
handbags and shoes, the fashion industry must slaughter 430m cows annually by
2025.
Their
analysis does not prove a direct link between each fashion brand and Amazon
deforestation; instead, researchers found connections that increase the
probability of any individual garment coming from cattle ranching in the
Amazon, an industry described as the No 1 culprit of deforestation in the area.
The report
identified fashion brands that participate in the Leather Working Group or
other voluntary commitments, but highlight that the Leather Working Group
evaluates tanneries only on their ability to trace leather back to
slaughterhouses, not back to farms.
“The goal
is to develop a clear plan [for the fashion industry] to close the loopholes,”
said Jungwon Kim, vice-president of strategy of Slow Factory, the climate
justice non-profit that collaborated on the report.
Of the 84
companies analyzed by the report, 23 had explicit policies on deforestation.
The researchers believe those 23 companies are “likely” violating their own
policies, based on their findings. The fashion house LVMH, for example, was
found to have a high risk of connections to Amazon deforestation – despite the
fact that earlier this year the brand pledged to protect the vulnerable region
with Unesco.
Sônia
Guajajara, executive coordinator of the Brazilian Indigenous Peoples’ Alliance
(APIB), said brands have “the moral responsibility, the influence and the
economic resources” to stop working with suppliers contributing to
deforestation in the Amazon today, “not in 10 years, not in 2025”.
The effect
of recent wildfires in the Amazon has had devastating consequences for
Indigenous groups, who say president Jair Bolsonaro forcibly removed Indigenous
peoples to make way for agriculture, mining and other development activities.
Angeline
Robertson, an investigative researcher who worked on the study, told the
Guardian she hopes the fashion industry will take cues from their analysis and
“work in their own self-interest”.
“In this
time of climate emergency, if the fashion industry wants to be relevant, this
is the opportunity,” she said.
Céline
Semaan, chief executive and co-founder of Slow Factory, said brands should not
use this as an opportunity to contribute to deforestation elsewhere, such as
Guatemala or Mexico, but invest in and explore alternatives that are not
extractive.
With
lab-grown alternatives on the rise, a future where your favorite bag or
sneakers don’t come at the expense of the Amazon rainforest is possible.
“At the end
of the day, we have to find other solutions and other alternative leathers that
are not animal-based and that are not plastic-based,” said Semaan. “With the
resources that fashion companies have, there’s really no excuse.”
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