PARIS — French Prime Minister Sébastien Lecornu launched a procedure Wednesday
to suspend Shein after a series of controversies involving the Chinese-founded
online fast-fashion platform.
In a statement, France’s economy ministry said the suspension would last until
the platform demonstrates “that all its content complies with our laws and
regulations.”
It’s unclear if the suspension applies to Shein’s digital operations, the
brick-and-mortar store that opened its doors Wednesday or both.
A report from France’s consumer watchdog put out over the weekend alleged that
“sex dolls with childlike appearances” were being sold by Shein. Earlier
Wednesday, conservative lawmaker Antoine Vermorel Marques filed a legal
complaint, telling daily Le Parisien that he had identified weapons being sold
on the website.
France’s Economy Minister Roland Lescure, and the Minister for Small and
Medium-Sized Enterprises Serge Papin will issue an “initial progress report”
within the next 48 hours, the statement said.
Earlier this week, Shein’s executive chairman, Donald Tang, told POLITICO that
the firm created an “integrity panel” to review what products are sold on the
platform and launched an internal inquiry.
This article was first published by POLITICO in French and translated by Victor
Goury-Laffont. Nicolas Barré contributed reporting.
Tag - Online shopping
BRUSSELS — Europeans’ soaring appetite for fast fashion — accelerated by the
ease of online marketplaces — is putting immense pressure on the environment,
according to a report from the EU’s top environmental watchdog.
New data from the European Environment Agency shows that EU citizens are buying
more textile products through online shopping than ever before, and especially
from brands that sell cheaper products in large volumes, otherwise known as fast
fashion.
The report comes as EU institutions are finalizing new rules for textile waste
management across Europe, which will make fashion brands pay a fee for the
processing of their products once they become waste, in an attempt to encourage
them to sell more sustainable and longer-lasting items.
In 2022, EU citizens bought about 19 kilograms of new clothes, shoes and other
household fabrics each — up from 17 kilograms in 2019 — yet throwing out as
much as 16 kilograms of clothes annually.
This created about 7 million metric tons of textile waste across the bloc:
Enough to fill a large suitcase per person each year.
The report states that 85 percent of these discarded clothes aren’t reused or
recycled, and often end up getting burnt or landfilled. As of January, EU
countries are supposed to have separate collection systems in place for textile
waste to prevent this from happening.
By 2030, the EU wants all textile products that are placed on the EU market to
be durable, repairable and recyclable.
Online marketplaces and social media have “been instrumental in the growth of
fast fashion in recent years,” the EEA’s report notes, allowing retailers “to
constantly offer consumers new styles at exceedingly low prices.”
Without the possibility of trying before purchasing, people are more likely to
buy several sizes of the same items and opting to return, resell, or even throw
out the products that don’t fit. But on average, up to 44 percent of returns
never reach a new customer and get destroyed.
Out of all the different types of products that European households consume —
like food, gas and electricity, or health products — garments and footwear are
the fifth most resource-intensive category.
According to the report, 234 million metric tons of raw materials, like fuel and
cotton, were used to produce all the textile consumed by EU households. That’s a
lot less than in 2010, however, which suggests that fewer resources are needed
per item of clothing.