Starting in 2025, brands that want to appear on its schedule must ensure the materials used in their collections are free from the skins of wild animals, such as crocodiles, alligators, and snakes.
Crocodile - image from Stockcake.com
The skins of wild animals, such as crocodiles, alligators, and snakes, will be banned on the runway from 2025.
London Fashion Week is banning all wild animal skins from the
runway, becoming the first of the “big four” fashion weeks -
alongside New York, Paris, and Milan - to take this step.
The British Fashion Council’s (BFC) deputy director for policy and
engagement, David Leigh-Pemberton, announced the ban in a speech to
parliament this week.
Starting in 2025, brands that want to appear on its schedule must
ensure the materials used in their collections are free from the
skins of wild animals, such as crocodiles, alligators, and snakes.
Leigh-Pemberton said the wild animal skins ban came as part of a
wider package of standards introduced under the BFC’s Institute of
Positive Fashion.
“We know that many of our designers have strong ethics and are
working towards more sustainable practices and accurate measurement.
We are committed to providing our network with tools and resources
to help them on this journey.”
This decision follows the BFC’s previous fur ban, adopted in
December 2023. The organization is currently seeking consultation
about feather use.
People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA), well-known for
crashing runways to protest against the fashion industry's use of
animals, welcomed the announcement.
“We salute the compassionate British designers who helped usher in
this new policy by recognising that crocodiles, lizards, snakes, and
other animals should never be bludgeoned, impaled, or beheaded for
their skin,” said Yvonne Taylor, PETA’s vice president of corporate
projects. “The future of fashion is animal-free – and the future is
now.”
Investigations by PETA have revealed that animals used in the exotic
skins industry are forced to live in appalling conditions before
they’re electroshocked, bludgeoned, or even skinned alive to be used
in luxury handbags, belts, wallets, and other fashion items.
Dr Charlotte Regan, a wildlife campaign manager at World Animal
Protection UK, said the decision sent an “important message
throughout the global fashion industry that exploiting animals for
their skins is both unethical and unnecessary.
“Millions of animals continue to suffer and die for fashion when
there are so many innovative and exciting animal-friendly materials
designers and clothing companies can choose to create with instead,”
Regan continued. “With both fur and now wild animal skins banned
from London Fashion Week, our attention turns to the use of wild
bird feathers in fashion. We look forward to working with the
British Fashion Council on the last step of their journey to being a
completely wildlife-free event.”
Copenhagen Fashion Week announced earlier this year that it would
ban feathers from its shows from 2025.
Emma Hakansson, founding director of Collective Fashion Justice
said: “We also know there is more to do, continuing the conversation
on feathers towards what we hope will be a totally wildlife-free
policy.
“For decades, brands have banned fur, stating an opposition to
killing animals specifically for fashion. This is exactly what
happens to the crocodiles, snakes, ostriches and other wild animals
skinned and plucked for fashion too, making bans on these skins and
feathers consistent with an existing and widely agreed upon ethical
premise.
“Momentum for wildlife protection in fashion is building, as the
organizations have helped to deliver totally wildlife-free policies
across Copenhagen, Berlin and Melbourne Fashion Week.”
Although London Fashion Week tends to feature smaller, emerging
designers—making the wild animal skin ban easier to implement—there
has also been notable progress among high-end luxury brands.
Designers like Burberry, Chanel, Marc Jacobs, and many others have
now banned the use of skins from reptiles and other wildlife from
their collections.