USA TODAY US Edition

CoverGirl cosmetics are officially cruelty free

- Charisse Jones

CoverGirl is officially cruelty free. The beauty giant is now the biggest makeup brand to receive certificat­ion that it has eliminated animal testing from every step of its production process, a move that is increasing­ly demanded by consumers who want what they eat, drive and wear to spare the environmen­t.

“If we can do it with our size and with our capability and with our complexity ... every brand can do this,” says Ukonwa Ojo, chief marketing officer of consumer beauty for Coty, CoverGirl’s parent company. “If we all do it together, we can all envision a cosmetics industry and world that is free from unnecessar­y animal testing.”

Coty has long had a policy of not conducting testing on animals. But to get the “Leaping Bunny” stamp of approval from Cruelty Free Internatio­nal, a globally recognized standard-bearer, it spent months demonstrat­ing that its hundreds of third-party suppliers also do not perform such testing when creating CoverGirl’s thousands of products and ingredient­s.

To meet CFI’s strict criteria, CoverGirl will also undergo ongoing independen­t checks of its supply chain.

“That is a rigorous process, and they have to prove what they say,” says Michelle Thew, CFI’s CEO. She noted that while many brands claim on their packaging to not have conducted animal testing, that may only relate to the finished product, while the majority of testing occurs in the production of ingredient­s and along the supply chain.

Coty, which also owns such cosmetic lines as Max Factor and Rimmel, is aiming to get the cruelty free certificat­ion for a second brand by 2020.

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