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World Animal
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2008
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Compassionate Shopping
L'Oréal Fact File
L'Oréal say: "L'Oréal voluntarily stopped animal testing on its entire range of cosmetic products
in 1989."
Fact |
EU legislation requires that newly developed ingredients are tested on animals,
where no alternatives exist. |
Fact |
L'Oréal continue to use newly developed ingredients in their products. |
- L'Oréal justify their use of animal tested ingredients, claiming that: "Companies
manufacturing all types of products containing chemical substances, with no exception,
can... only use ingredients which have undergone compulsory safety tests."
- This statement leads the consumer to believe that any animal testing has nothing to
do with the cosmetics companies, and lays the blame squarely on legislation!
- It fails to acknowledge that it is perfectly possible to create cosmetics and
associated products using ingredients with an established safety record – this is how
ethical companies such as The Co-op and The Body Shop have adopted 'fixed cut off dates'.
The cost of innovation
- In 2002 L'Oréal submitted 501 patents for newly developed formulations, with 1400
new formulations being registered in the last three years.
- Yet the Cosmetic sector defends the continuing introduction of new products saying
"In essence these products are a response to consumer demand"
- There is a simple solution to this – boycott companies whom have not yet adopted
fixed cut off date policies.
In reality it is L’Oréal’s quest for expanding markets and bigger profits that lead them
to develop new ingredients - the animal testing of which they try to sidestep responsibility
for when they cite 'compulsory safety tests'.
Cosmetic Testing Alternatives – FACTS AND FIGURES
Template letter to L'Oréal
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