The Scotsman

MPS examine UK fur trade after products mislabelle­d

● Retailers caught out as real fur found in garments labelled as fake

- By JANE BRADLEY Consumer Affairs Correspond­ent

The UK government is launching an inquiry into the fur trade in the UK in the wake of a spate of retailers selling garments made from animals including rabbit, fox and chinchilla as fake fur.

Westminste­r’s environmen­t committee is to examine the industry and debate how it can be made more transparen­t for the consumers.

The decision comes months after it emerged that major retailers including House of Fraser were selling products which were mislabelle­d as fake fur, when they actually contained animal fur. An investigat­ion using evidence from a fibres expert found that fur from animals such as cats was entering the supply chain in countries including China and being mislabelle­d as synthetic material.

The retailers involved said they had strict no fur policies and removed the products from sale, saying they would not intentiona­lly mislead their customers.

Fur farming was banned in the UK in 2000, while EU regulation­s ban trade in fur from domestic cats, dogs or commercial seal hunts. However, the UK still imports and sells fur from a range of other species such as fox, rabbit, mink, coyote, racoon dog and chinchilla­s – to a value of around £650m annually.

The committee added that Brexit may “provide an opportunit­y”fortheukgo­vernment

0 Rabbits are among the animals bred for their fur outside the UK to look at legislatio­n around the import of fur.

Neil Parish, chairman of the environmen­t, food and rural affairs committee, said: “Fur farming has been banned in the UK for 18 years, and the sale of legal fur sourced from outside the UK should be tightly regulated. Reports … that real fur is being sold as fake fur concerns us greatly, and so we have chosen to formally inquire into the matter.

“Retailers have a duty of care to their customers who have the right to know what they are buying. Our inquiry will determine where responsibi­lity lies for the increase in illegal fur sales, and identify the steps that need to be taken to stop it in its tracks.”

Claire Bass, executive director of charity Humane Society Internatio­nal, said “Since banning fur farming in the UK we have been importing hundreds of millions of pounds of fur from farms overseas.

“The vast majority of the British public support an animal fur import ban and it is exciting that this sentiment is being echoed by MPS from across the political spectrum.”

The committee has asked for experts and stakeholde­rs to submit written evidence by 23 February.

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