Are H&M and Zara Driving Deforestation in Brazil?

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Zara owner Inditex wants answers from the world’s largest cotton sustainability initiative after an environmental nonprofit linked the Spanish fashion giant to corruption, illegal deforestation, land grabbing and violence against local communities through two Brazilian producers of its certified cotton.

The allegations by London-based Earthsight “represent a serious breach in the trust placed in Better Cotton’s certification process by both our group and our product suppliers,” Javier Losada, Inditex’s head of sustainability, told Better Cotton CEO Alan McClay in an April 8 letter that was first reported by Spanish news site Modaes on Wednesday. “The trust that we place in such processes developed by independent organizations, such as yours, is key to our supply chain control strategy.”

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Losada wrote that Inditex had waited six months for the results of a Better Cotton investigation into Earthsight’s findings that was promised at the end of March. A spokesperson for the Geneva- and London-based program, which touts more sustainable cotton grown with less water, fewer pesticides and healthier yields for farmers, told Sourcing Journal on Monday that it will provide further details after it has analyzed the results of a third-party audit of three farms implicated by Earthsight’s research, which was published on Thursday.

The report also incriminates H&M Group in the destruction that industrial agriculture has wrought in the species-diverse and ecologically sensitive tropical savanna of Cerrado, just south of the Amazon, where deforestation due to agricultural expansion has soared by 43 percent in 2023—the result, some ecologists say, of efforts to spare the Amazon that simply displace those harms elsewhere. Clearing land in the Cerrado for agriculture generates 230 million metric tons of carbon per year, the equivalent of annual emissions from 50 million cars, according to the World Wildlife Fund. Because of tree loss, more than one-fifth of the region’s species, including flagship animals such as the maned wolf, the jaguar, the giant anteater and the giant armadillo, are staring down extinction. In addition, over one-third—34 percent—of its river flows could also disappear by 2050.

“We visited a number of communities where you see dried-up springs and rivers because of the unsustainable water extraction by agribusinesses,” said Rubens Carvalho, head of deforestation research at Earthsight.