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| Shinzo Maeda, president and chief executive officer of Shiseido Co., speaks during an interview in San Francisco, California, U.S., on April 15, 2010. (Bloomberg Photo/Kim White) |
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Japan’s
Shiseido on Friday said it was mostly dropping animal-tested cosmetics, as the
European Union gets set to finalize a sweeping ban on the sale of such products
later this month.
But the
company said exceptions to the policy meant it would still allow animal testing
when that was the only way of proving the safety of products already being sold
in the market, and in some countries where animal testing is legally required.
The policy,
which starts from April, applies to all of the Tokyo-based cosmetic giant’s
production sites, including those run by suppliers, it said.
“Our
business partners that supply material to us will not rely on animal testing,
while we will no longer outsource such testing to outside labs,” a Shiseido
spokesman said.
The policy
was officially adopted at a board meeting Thursday, he added.
Activists
have for years pressured cosmetic firms and other companies that use animal
testing to find alternatives to the practice, which they say is cruel and
unnecessary.
Shiseido,
which dropped animal testing at its own labs in 2011, sells into the key Europe
market, which is getting set to complete a ban on the import and sale of
animal-tested cosmetic products from later this month.
Shiseido
said it could ensure the safety of its products through others means, including
using data from past experiments, human volunteers and other kinds of testing.
Agence France-Presse

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