The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Burberry to stop destroying goods, using fur

- By Lucca de Paoli and Robert Williams

Burberry Group will stop destroying unsold products and using animal fur as it works to placate investors and compete with leading luxury brands that are racing to clean up their images with new commitment­s on sustainabi­lity and ethics.

Top-end fashion brands have long preferred to burn some unsold items or bury them in landfill rather than risk their labels being spotted in discount store bins. Burberry, known for its tartans and trench coats, became the face of the practice in recent months after disclosing it had destroyed almost $37 million in goods last year — a revelation that piqued investors’ ire at the London-based company’s annual meeting in July.

The amount of scuttled goods spiked from the previous year as the brand took steps to revamp its fashion offer while scrapping an in-house perfume business that was licensed to Coty Inc. The company did an about-face Thursday, saying it would find ways to repair, donate or repurpose materials from unsaleable products.

“Modern luxury means being socially and environmen­tally responsibl­e,” Burberry Chief Executive Officer Marco Gobbetti said in a statement. “This belief is core to us at Burberry and key to our long-term success.”

As fashion’s pendulum perpetuall­y swings from halter tops to power shoulders, from skinny suits to oversized fireman jackets, while models and tastemaker­s jet around the world to participat­e in shows, waste may not appear to be a top industry concern. A fresh collection of readyto-wear looks can be essential to setting the mood in luxury boutiques, so stores focused on selling their most profitable handbags are nonetheles­s plastered with jackets, gowns and other items that have little chance of finding a buyer.

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