Gucci commits to fur-free collections

epa04636655 A model wears a fur coat at the Hong Kong International Fur and Fashion Fair 2015, in Hong Kong, China, 25 February 2015. According to traders at the show, 90 percent of fur produced in fur farms in the United States and Europe is bought by buyers from factories in mainland China - the world's fastest growing market for fur garments.  EPA/ALEX HOFFORD

Bloomberg

Italian fashion house Gucci plans to drop animal fur from its collections, showing how concerns about responsible business practices that originated with the Birkenstock brigade have galvanised an industry known for its celebration of excess.
The Milan-based maker of $1,000 fur-lined slippers, part of French luxury conglomerate Kering, will sell its remaining fur items in a charity auction, the company said in a statement, citing the “deprivation and cruelty suffered by fur-bearing animals.”
The move, effective next spring, comes as high-end brands join consumer-goods giants like Unilever and Nestle SA in responding to growing ethical, environmental and social awareness among consumers, especially millennials. The luxury industry’s use of animal skins has become a touchstone of these concerns for protesters who have flocked to fashion shows around the world.
Gucci’s move to drop fur follows increased scrutiny of its behind-the-scenes practices, ranging from factory conditions to the treatment of runway models. Kering and Paris-based rival LVMH last month agreed to curb the use of ultraskinny and underage models.
Gucci follows other Italian companies, like Giorgio Armani SpA and luxury e-commerce platform Yoox Net-a-Porter Group SpA, in dropping fur. LVMH, the world’s largest luxury-goods maker, is aiming to get almost one-third of its electricity from renewable sources by 2020, the company announced last month.
Kering, whose Stella McCartney brand has long advocated the use of synthetic leather in footwear, has said it wants to eliminate hazardous chemicals from its supply chain by 2020 and make sure all
of its leather, gold and diamonds can
be traced to company-approved sources by 2025.

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