RSPCA calls for improved welfare

Published: 4-Jun-2006


The Royal Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals (RSPCA) has called on the cosmetics industry to improve its animal welfare practices and clarify product labelling as it launches the 2006 RSPCA Good Business Awards.

The awards, established in 2005, showcase companies who have demonstrated a clear effort to respond to the desires of their consumers. Four categories are available for companies, including: restaurants and food chains; food retailers and supermarkets; retailers, designers and labels; and cosmetic retailers and manufacturers.

The inaugural cosmetic award was won by The Body Shop whose policies against animal testing and clear labelling provided a winning formula.

“Cosmetics companies should enable consumers to make informed choices by clearly labelling their products to show whether they have been tested on animals and furthermore, detailing whether any ingredients were tested on or derived from animals,” said David Bowles, head of external affairs at RSPCA.

In other UK news, the British Union for the Abolition of Vivisection (BUAV) has announced it will be running a week-long promotion on the subject of animal welfare in July. National Cruelty-Free Week will run from 17-23 July and to accompany this the BUAV has launched the Little Book of Cruelty-Free on the subject of vivisection.

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