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Corporate Social Responsibility
News
4.07.2008 - 10:32am ET
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Patagonia Is First to Track Environmental and Social Impact of Its Products
"The Footprint Chronicles" Website Launches With Unprecedented Corporate Transparency
(CSRwire) VENTURA, CA -- (MARKET WIRE) -- 04/07/08 -- Patagonia is the first major
apparel manufacturer to track and expose the social and environmental
impact of specific garments through The Footprint
Chronicles, an interactive website that reveals to consumers the good
and the bad involved in manufacturing outdoor clothing such as Synchilla
fleece vests and rain shells. In a bold move that might make most
companies nervous, Patagonia is determined to be candid and forthright
about its impact on the environment and created the site to encourage
dialog with its customers who are concerned about the environment.
"We believe that to avoid complacency, we must constantly examine our
internal processes to improve upon the positive and mitigate the
negative," said Casey Sheahan, president and CEO of Patagonia. "The Footprint
Chronicles allows us to do this publicly -- sort of learning out
loud." He points out that the idea behind the website is to encourage
thought and discussion. Each season the site will examine new products, so
that the more that is exposed, the more harmful practices the company can
change. Five new products will be added on Earth Day, 2008.
"Our customers are scientists, activists, professors, doctors and more --
they have the collective experience and knowledge we're looking for," said
Sheahan. "We're highlighting exactly what happens in the manufacturing
process and asking customers for their suggestions and help in efforts to
find solutions to our less sustainable practices. It's a unique dialogue
to engage in -- but one that will ultimately allow us to cause less harm
to the planet."
According to Jill Dumain, Patagonia's director of environmental programs,
the research involved in developing the Chronicles has proved to actually
drive major business decisions at Patagonia.
"The Chronicles revealed that transportation makes up only about 1 percent
of our overall energy use," said Dumain. "Had we listened to the current
media buzz touting transportation as the largest factor in energy
consumption, we might have greatly misplaced our efforts by making strides
to geographically shorten our supply chain -- which would have massively
impacted our business financially, logistically and perhaps even effected
product quality -- and we would only have reduced our energy savings by 1
percent. Instead, we are focusing our energy on areas where we can truly
make a difference -- right in the heart of the manufacturing process."
The launch of The Footprint
Chronicles puts into practice a prototype that they hope will inspire
other companies to increase their transparency, and at the very least,
raise awareness.
"We've been in business long enough to know that if we can reduce or
eliminate a harm, other businesses will be eager to follow suit,"
said Sheahan. "Many companies will be pleasantly surprised that when they
delve into their manufacturing processes, they will be able to present a
balanced expose of their practices. Customers will appreciate their
honesty and reward them for it."
The Footprint
Chronicles includes more than 35 filmed interviews and slideshows of
factory workers, farmers, owners, designers and third-party auditors to
provide an unprecedented level of transparency both internally and
externally -- from the factories and manufacturing partners that create
its products, to the end of the product's lifespan.
About Patagonia
Patagonia, with sales last year of over $280M, is noted internationally
for its commitment to product quality and environmental activism.
Incorporating environmental responsibility in to product development, the
company has, since 1996, used only organically grown cotton in its
clothing line. With its most recent launch of synthetic fiber-to-fiber
recycling -- Patagonia is taking back worn-out polyester and nylon
clothing and reincarnating it as new products, forever capturing the raw
materials used in making virgin fiber.
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