Showing posts with label nike. Show all posts
Showing posts with label nike. Show all posts

Thursday, 6 August 2009

Shoe companies take a step forward


After working with us over the past few weeks, Clarks have today announced that they will ensure the suppliers that provide the leather for their shoes from stop sourcing it from deforested areas of the Amazon. This is a really positive move - they're not only rejecting leather from illegally logged areas of the region, but from any cattle ranch that is being run on deforested land.

This means there's a unified front from the shoe companies we challenged over Amazon leather in their supply chains. All have now committed to avoiding leather that is implicated in Amazon destruction. Clarks join Adidas, Nike, Timberland and Geox, who have all made similar commitments over the past few weeks.

This is great news from the point of view of halting Amazon deforestation, and even better, it should lead to longer-term reform of the cattle ranching sector in Brazil. The shoe companies are demanding stringent traceability standards from the big cattle companies, and it's this kind of regulatory change which can set the conditions for more long-term shift in the way the Amazon is protected.

As our report, Slaughtering the Amazon, shows, cattle ranching to produce beef and leather is the biggest driver of deforestation in Brazil. Getting companies to put pressure on suppliers to change their ways and regulate their industries can really work in limiting rainforest destruction:

It's worth noting that the moratorium that we were involved in pushing for several years ago on soya has just been extended for another year. In a similar story to the cattle work, our campaign pressured the major soya traders operating in Brazil to announce a two-year moratorium. This dramatically decreased the trade in soya grown on newly deforested land in the Amazon.

The announcement of the extension of the soya moratorium was attended by the Brazilian environment minister Carlos Minc and the Soya Working Group. It's also been welcomed by the European companies that supported its establishment so that they could guarantee soya linked to Amazon destruction did not end up in their products. The story of the soya moratorium shows how a sector can shift to take into account the environmental impact of their business. With leadership from the shoe companies we're seeing the same process happening with leather.

What next? Well, we still want UK supermarkets to make similar commitments on the beef products they supply. So there's still work to do. But this is a big step forward for the shoe industry, and a key victory in delivering the kind of long-term regulation that can help meet our goal of zero deforestation in the Amazon, and around the world.

Thursday, 23 July 2009

Nike agree to stop buying Amazon leather following Greenpeace report


The global sportswear company Nike has announced that it is to stop buying leather from the Amazon region of Brazil, following concerns that its shoes and trainers could be driving the destruction of the world's largest rainforest and contributing to climate change.

The move follows a Greenpeace report, released in June, which exposed how cattle hides from deforested areas were contaminating the supply chains of a number of global brands including Nike, Clarks, Adidas and Reebok. Deforestation for cattle ranching in Brazil alone is now the biggest driver of deforestation anywhere in the world.

A Nike spokesman will release the new company policy at their headquarters in Beaverton, Oregon at 1700 UK time. A host of British sports stars are sponsored by Nike and wear their products, including Wayne Rooney, Rio Ferdinand, and the entire English Rugby Union team.

Reacting to the news, Greenpeace forest campaigner Sarah Shoraka said:

"Nike has recognised that trampling over the Amazon rainforest to produce leather for its trainers is an unacceptable way of doing business. Preparing land for cattle ranching is now the single biggest cause of deforestation in the world and a major driver of climate change.

"Nike has taken a bold step, and now we need to see other companies follow their lead."

The Greenpeace report has already caused significant movement within the Brazilian cattle industry, and it is hoped that Nike's decision will help pave the way for an industry wide moratorium on the destruction of forests for cattle ranching. Greenpeace is demanding that other shoe companies such as Reebok, Clarks and Adidas follow Nike's lead and support a moratorium.

The policy document that Nike signed today requires all of its suppliers "to certify that they are supplying leather for Nike Inc. products from cattle raised outside the Amazon biome." This policy will be in place until Nike feels that a reliable system of governance -with full traceability of cattle products which includes the guarantee that those products are not causing deforestation - in place in the Amazon.

These suppliers then have until July 2010 to create a fully traceable supply system, which will provide reliable proof that any leather used for Nike shoes has not been sourced from recently deforested areas.

The Greenpeace report, entitled Slaughtering the Amazon was released on June 1st. It can be viewed at http://www.greenpeace.org/international/press/reports/slaughtering-the-amazon

The Nike policy is available to view at http://www.nikebiz.com/media/pr/2009/07/22_AmazonLeatherPolicy.html