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adidas, M&S, IKEA Among Brands Making Great Strides to Source Slave-Free Cotton

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The Responsible Sourcing Network (RSN), a nonprofit dedicated to ending human rights abuses associated with the raw materials found in everyday products, today released a new report, Cotton Sourcing Snapshot: A Survey of Corporate Practices to End Forced Labor. The report includes survey results and ratings of 49 companies in the apparel and home goods industries reflecting steps companies are taking to identify risks and establish procedures to prevent cotton from Uzbekistan picked with forced labor from entering their supply chains.

The survey offered a maximum of 100 points across 11 indicators in the categories of Policy, Public Disclosure, Engagement, and Implementation & Auditing. Only five companies scored over 50 points, 19 companies scored under 25 points, and two companies scored zero.

“Although almost 80 percent of the companies surveyed have some sort of policy against Uzbek cotton, most companies are taking little to no action to be absolutely certain the cotton in their products is not originating in Uzbekistan,” said Patricia Jurewicz, director and founder of RSN and co-author of the report. “Yet, there are several companies that have implemented systems that guarantee the integrity of their raw materials. All companies could easily replicate these best practices.”

The report found that only two percent of companies surveyed fully disclose progress and/or challenges with their strategies on Uzbek cotton, and only six percent have fully implemented a traceability or spinner verification program. Companies scoring highest include adidas (68 points), Marks & Spencer (63 points), and IKEA (62.5) — all of which signed RSN’s "Company Pledge Against Forced Child and Adult Labor in Uzbek Cotton" last year — while companies scoring no points include Urban Outfitters and All Saints.

The government of Uzbekistan is notorious for forcing up to a million of its citizens to work in the cotton harvest each year. Due to mounting international and corporate pressure, the last two years have largely excluded children 6-14, who have been forced to harvest cotton in the past. However, the Uzbek government is now mobilizing even greater numbers of teenagers, university students, and adults. 

Since 2007, RSN has been coordinating the faith-based and sustainable and responsible investment (SRI) communities to engage corporations involved in the apparel and home goods industries on the issue of forced labor in the Uzbek cotton sector. Cotton Sourcing Snapshot offers insight to investors on specific actions companies are taking to avoid these human rights risks embedded in their products. Several recommendations are also presented to help move the industries towards greater certainty and transparency — companies are encouraged to implement an industry-wide spinner certification program, integrate supplier compliance into their IT systems, and increase disclosure of internal practices and challenges.

RSN’s Cotton Program aims to eliminate the most egregious human rights abuses at the field level of apparel supply chains. The Cotton Program has previously released two reports on Uzbek cotton, From the Field and To the Spinner. Currently, RSN’s Cotton Pledge against forced labor in the cotton sector of Uzbekistan has garnered 141 brands and companies as signatories.

In other sustainable cotton news, the recently released State of Sustainability Initiatives (SSI) Review 2014 revealed that voluntary sustainability standards such as Fairtrade, Rainforest Alliance and Organic are gaining traction in mainstream markets, with certified cotton production growing 55 percent (the fourth-largest sector behind palm oil, sugar and cocoa) in 2012. SSI credits much of this growth to private-sector sourcing commitments from companies such as IKEA, which recently announced it more than doubled its use of sustainably sourced cotton in 2013 to 72 percent, up from 34 percent in 2012.

To learn more about how companies worldwide are cleaning up their #SupplyChains, check out the editorial channel.

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