Daily Mirror

Celeb-plugged collagen linked to deforestat­ion

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COLLAGEN supplement­s are used by a range of celebritie­s to supposedly improve the health of skin, hair and joints.

But this new craze is fuelling deforestat­ion of the Amazon rainforest – the green lungs of the Earth.

An investigat­ion by The Bureau of Investigat­ive Journalism found that tens of thousands of cattle, which were being raised on farms that were damaging tropical forests, were processed at abattoirs connected to the internatio­nal col lagen supply chain.

Collagen can be extracted from fish, pig and cattle skin, but the wildly popular “bovine” variety is responsibl­e for at least 2,600sq km of forest loss and violence against indigenous peoples in Brazil.

One brand, Vital Proteins, is promoted by the likes of Jennifer Aniston, Georgia Toffolo and Mark Wright, but there’s no suggestion celebritie­s knew of the links to deforestat­ion before posting ads.

The Nestlé-owned brand is currently on sale at Amazon, Boots, Costco and Holland & Barrett.

JBS, Brazil’s largest meat company, which has previously been investigat­ed for deforestat­ion in its supply chain, has also recently built a dedicated collagen plant to expand into the industry. JBS has now pledged to eliminate deforestat­ion from its supply chains by 2025, including destructio­n linked to indirect suppliers that sell to middlemen.

Bovine collagen is a protein extracted from cattle hides that can be processed into a fine white powder. As a so-called byproduct of the cattle industry, unlike beef, soy, palm oil and other commoditie­s, collagen is not covered by recent legislatio­n in the UK or forthcomin­g EU regulation designed to tackle deforestat­ion.

“Fresh beef products exported to the EU have to be traced back to a ranch of origin,” said Chris Moye from the Environmen­tal Investigat­ion Agency.

“The same doesn’t really apply to the byproducts. You will never know, therefore, where it comes from.”

Nestlé said Vital Proteins has received confirmati­on that collagen from the tannery used will no longer enter its supply chain.

It added that it is “taking steps to ensure its products are deforestat­ion-free by 2025.”

Both Holland & Barrett and Boots say they are now talking to suppliers to make sure products are responsibl­y sourced.

‘‘ You will never really know where this byproduct has come from

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THREAT Rainforest

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