LVMH's Dior lagged on supply chain disclosure, made outdated ESG claim
FILE PHOTO: Logo of fashion house Dior in Paris · Reuters

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By Helen Reid, Mimosa Spencer

PARIS (Reuters) -LVMH's second-largest fashion brand Dior was until last month behind on disclosures required by UK law about working conditions in its supply chain, and made outdated statements on its website of a third-party certification that it terminated more than a year ago, Reuters has found.

In Britain, the Modern Slavery Act of 2015 requires companies with UK turnover of 36 million pounds ($46 million) or above to publish annual statements on their websites detailing the steps they are taking to combat forced labour in their business and supply chains globally.

Until July 19, Dior's UK website showed an anti-slavery statement from 2020 and a sustainability certification that was no longer valid, a Reuters review of company filings showed.

Dior, part of $345-billion conglomerate LVMH that is getting a global marketing boost as major sponsor to the Paris Olympics, has come under the spotlight after Italy's competition authority on July 17 said it was probing whether it and Italian label Armani had misled consumers over their commitment to craftsmanship and social responsibility following a judicial investigation that exposed potential sweatshop-like conditions at some Italian contractors.

The investigation prompted Europe's top asset manager Amundi and other investors to ask LVMH to take more aggressive steps to monitor its suppliers' treatment of workers, these investors have told Reuters.

Dior has condemned the illegal practices uncovered at some suppliers, said it had stopped working with them and that it was cooperating with authorities. Armani has expressed confidence in a "positive result following the investigation."

Dior published a 2023 modern slavery statement after Reuters enquired on July 18 about its compliance with the UK regulation. The new document says it was approved by subsidiary Christian Dior UK's board on July 18.

In its updated modern slavery statement, which is longer and more detailed than its 2020 one, the French brand said Christian Dior UK plans a training course to raise employees' awareness of modern slavery and to encourage them to take action if they suspect wrongdoing.

"We have been preparing an up to date modern slavery statement, which...has now been published on our website," Dior said in a written statement on July 19 in reply to Reuters' inquiries about the anti-slavery disclosure.

As of Aug. 5, Dior also had not published statements for 2021 and 2022. The company did not directly address Reuters questions about its missing statements.