Sparkly and shiny, but is your natural make-up free of forced labor?
Sparkly and shiny, but is your natural make-up free of forced labor?
LONDON
(Thomson Reuters Foundation) - Soaring global demand for natural beauty
products could be fuelling modern-day slavery as ingredients such as
cocoa, vanilla and the mineral mica are linked to child labor while
cosmetic supply chains lack oversight, analysts said on Friday.
Many
key components - from shea nuts to wax used as a base for mascara - are
produced by smallholder farmers where the risk of labor abuse is high
as governments and businesses struggle to monitor conditions, said risk
analysts Verisk Maplecroft.
Cosmetics
companies are benefiting from strong appetite for skincare products,
after riding a make-up boom in recent years spurred by young consumers
seeking to look good on social media.
While
buyers clamor for make-up made with various fruit, nuts, grains and
minerals, companies that increase the amount of natural ingredients in
their cosmetics could be opening a "Pandora's box of risk", according to
Britain-based Maplecroft.
"The
cosmetic supply chain is extremely complex and loosely regulated,"
Donna Westerman, head of consumer goods at Maplecroft, told the Thomson
Reuters Foundation.
"A
cosmetic or lotion may have anywhere from 50 to 100 ingredients sourced
from multiple countries all over the world and tracing materials to
their origin is a daunting task."
Mica,
a prized mineral that puts the sparkle in make-up, has been tarnished
by its connection with child and forced labor in India, yet it is still
widely used by cosmetics manufacturers, Maplecroft said in a risk
analysis report focusing on cosmetics.