Shein’s Sustainability Report Reveals Child Labor Cases

During audits, Shein, a global‍ online fashion retailer,⁣ discovered two instances of​ child labor in its supply chain. ⁤Child labor is defined as employing individuals⁢ under the age of ​15 or below the minimum employment‌ age set by the local region or country. In China, the minimum age for employment is 16.

According⁤ to Shein’s⁣ report, the company took‍ immediate action by suspending contracts with ⁢the manufacturers⁤ involved in ⁢these ⁢cases.⁢ The issues were swiftly resolved, ⁤and Shein resumed‍ working with these manufacturers.​ It is worth noting that this represents an improvement compared to⁢ 2022⁣ when child labor violations were ⁣found in 0.3 ‌percent of audits.

The ⁣report states that Shein followed its Supplier‍ Responsibility⁤ Standards (SRS) Policy at that time and gave⁣ errant suppliers a 30-day period to​ rectify their offenses. The ⁤remediation steps​ included terminating ​contracts with ⁤underage employees, ensuring payment ‌of ‌outstanding wages, arranging medical checkups, and facilitating repatriation to parents or⁣ legal guardians if ⁣necessary.

To prevent future ⁢violations, Shein has strengthened regulations by ‌requiring ⁣manufacturers to verify identification and maintain records during new hires’ screening process.⁢ Additionally, it ⁣has updated its policy to terminate suppliers ⁤who ⁢violate child or⁢ forced labor regulations.

Forced labor‍ cases were not identified in⁢ the‌ report; however, ‍forced labor was found⁢ in 0.1 percent of audits conducted in 2022.

The report also revealed wage violations such as⁤ paying​ below the local minimum ⁢wage or delaying payments in 0.5 percent of audits conducted within China. ​All these cases were resolved within a month according to Shein’s report.

Shein relied on third-party‍ verification agencies for ⁣auditing purposes‌ across its supplier and ⁢subcontractor sites in China—approximately 3,990 locations—assigning each ‍site‌ a grade​ from A ⁢to E based ⁤on their compliance performance. With over​ 16,000 employees worldwide and‍ collaborations ‌with ⁣around 5,800 contract manufacturers ​globally ⁢as stated in the⁢ report.

In terms of supplier performance evaluation grades ⁣given‌ by Shein; three suppliers ‌had their contracts terminated due to failure to address policy violations; one received consecutive failing grades while another refused ⁢an audit request from Shein itself.

As a signatory ⁤member of U.N Global Compact ⁣initiative which‍ requires adherence international labour laws prohibiting forced labour practices including child labour ,Sheins CEO Sky Xu wrote ⁤”Balancing remediation and penalization we have ‌supported our suppliers with‌ training…while taking firm but necessary step terminate‌ working relationships ​where ​warranted”

Furthermore ,Sheins aims‍ include reaching⁤ net zero emissions⁤ by year2050 , adopting additional internal initiatives for reducing greenhouse⁤ gas ⁢emissions ,using renewable energy sources,and establishing fully circular textile ⁤supply chains also ‍by year2050

Accordingly,in year2023 ,72%of ‌sheins electricity came from renewable sources up from68%the‍ previous⁣ year .However,this figure does ‍not ⁢account for electricity usage among sheins⁣ suppliers/subcontractors.The company plans ​on implementing new initiatives aimed at helping suppliers become more energy efficient

Collaborating with Apparel Impact Institute,she⁤ introduced⁤ projects focused on reducing energy consumption⁣ & water waste at28 supplier‍ sites.These ‍projects are‌ estimated save14k MWh electricity &46k metric tons carbon emissions annually

The reports states that ⁢sheins carbon emissions increased from9 ⁢.17 ‍million ⁢metric⁤ tons(2022)to16 .68 million metric tons(2023),reflecting company ⁢growth

In addition,the Uyghur Forced Labor Prevention Act ‌(UFLPA) was enacted in2018.This act⁤ prohibits ‌imports ⁢products made using forced labour.The name refers Chinese Communist Party’s persecution Uyghur ethnic minority Xinjiang region involving use forced ⁢labour

British Business Secretary Jonathan Reynolds emphasized that any company found guilty using forced labour should not be allowed do business UK

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