Sweden-based H&M follows VF Corp, owner of shoe and clothing brands including Timberland, Vans and North Face, which made a similar announcement last week in response to the fires.
Business
Standard : H&M, the world's second-biggest fashion
retailer, said on Thursday it had stopped purchasing leather from
Brazil for the time being due to environmental concerns highlighted
by Amazon
wildfires.
Sweden-based
H&M follows VF Corp, owner of shoe and clothing brands including
Timberland, Vans and North Face, which made a similar announcement
last week in response to the fires.
Thousands
of fires tearing through the Amazon have spawned an international
crisis for Brazil, with public protests and world leaders voicing
concern that the government of Jair Bolsonaro is doing too little to
protect the world's largest tropical rainforest.
Fears
have been growing in Brazil that companies would step back from the
country amid adverse publicity surrounding the burning forest and the
prospect of international sanctions.
"Due
to the severe fires in the Brazilian part of the Amazon rainforest,
and the connections to cattle production, we have decided to place a
temporary ban on leather from Brazil," H&M
said in an emailed statement.
"The
ban will be active until there are credible assurance systems in
place to verify that the leather does not contribute to environmental
harm in the Amazon," it said.
Brazil's
space research agency INPE says a surge this year in fires is the
worst since 2010.
An
H&M spokeswoman said the vast majority of the group's leather
originates from Europe and only a very small part from Brazil.
According
to the Center for the Brazilian Tanning Industry, the main leather
trade group in Brazil, the country exported $1.44 billion of bovine
leather in 2018. Its largest export markets were the United States,
China and Italy.
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