Irish Daily Star

‘DIRTY COTTON SCOUNDRELS’

■ H&M & Zara could be using cotton tainted by Amazon destructio­n ■ Fears clothes on sale in Ireland are affected after probe

- ■■Shauna CORR Environmen­t Correspond­ent

TOP fashion brands, Zara and H&M, have been linked to illegal deforestat­ion, land grabbing and violence in an area of Brazil ‘plundered’ to grow cotton.

It follows a year-long investigat­ion by the NGO Earthsight, in which they tracked 816,000 tonnes of the ‘tainted’ cotton to Asian firms making jeans, hoodies, shorts and socks being sold in Ireland.

But the crops used to make them have come at a major cost to Brazil’s second largest biome, the Cerrado, and traditiona­l communitie­s forced off the land through violent attacks, shootings, intimidati­on and cattle theft.

Earthsight says around half the Cerrado, which is home to 5 per cent of Earth’s species, including giant anteaters and armadillos, jaguars and tapir, has been “destroyed by the greed of agribusine­sses”, which have helped make Brazil the world’s second largest cotton exporter.

Talk

While it spared the Amazon rainforest further destructio­n, it has come at a huge cost to communitie­s facing land grabs, unsustaina­ble water extraction and pesticide contaminat­ion as well as the 20 per cent of Cerrado species now facing extinction as a result.

Earthsight says the ‘stained’ cotton at the heart of this internatio­nal fashion scandal was certified ‘sustainabl­e’ by

Better Cotton, which is used to make most Zara and H&M products despite past allegation­s of greenwashi­ng, secrecy and human rights failures.

The non-profit’s director, Sam Lawson, said: “These firms talk about good practice, social responsibi­lity and certificat­ion schemes, they claim to invest in traceabili­ty and sustainabi­lity, but all this now looks about as fake as their high street window arrangemen­ts.

“It has become very clear that .... the commoditie­s we consume have to be addressed through regulation, not consumer choices.

Place

“That means lawmakers in consumer countries should put in place strong laws with tough enforcemen­t,” Mr Lawson suggested.

“In the meantime, shoppers should think twice before buying their next piece of cotton clothing.”

Results of the investigat­ion, which involved analysing satellite images, court rulings, shipment records and going undercover at global trade shows to trace cotton from Brazil’s most notorious estates, were sent to Zara, H&M and Better Cotton as well as the Brazilian firms and Asian manufactur­ers involved.

Better Cotton told Earthsight in a letter it “will contract an independen­t auditor to run enhanced verificati­on visits focusing on areas of risk highlighte­d in the report” before considerin­g next steps.

Zara owners, Inditex, told us: “We take the allegation­s against Better Cotton extremely seriously and we urge them to share the outcome of their third-party investigat­ion as soon as possible and take any necessary measures to ensure a sustainabl­e cotton certificat­ion that upholds the highest standards.

A spokespers­on for H&M said: “The findings from Earthsight’s report are highly concerning and we take these very seriously.

“As such, Better Cotton initiated a third-party investigat­ion as soon as these findings were brought to their attention.

“We are in close dialogue with Better Cotton to follow the result of the investigat­ion and the next steps that will be taken to strengthen and review their standard.”

Laws

Earthsight has called on European Union and United Kingdom lawmakers to revise proposed laws around commoditie­s causing deforestat­ion to include cotton “without delay”

 ?? ?? CONCERN: A H&M main street outlet
GARMENT TRADE: Cotton used to make clothes worn in Ireland could come from Brazilian forest
STAIN: The precious rainforest and (below) the two brands linked to illegal deforestat­ion
CONCERN: A H&M main street outlet GARMENT TRADE: Cotton used to make clothes worn in Ireland could come from Brazilian forest STAIN: The precious rainforest and (below) the two brands linked to illegal deforestat­ion
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