3 April 2025

Where things come from

By: World Leather & Leatherbiz

Detailed work on traceability that Tapestry has been carrying out since 2019 could help companies in different parts of the supply chain respond to regulatory requirements, including EUDR.


Leathergoods and footwear group Tapestry is hoping to mark a key milestone in addressing deforestation in the leather value chain. It wants its efforts to establish a traceability approach to be of help to the entire sector and to contribute to industry standards. It believes its work may even help the leather industry resolve the challenges it faces in meeting the demands of the European Union Deforestation Regulation (EUDR).


The heated discussion about EUDR may have gone quiet since the authorities in the European Union agreed to delay its implementation by one year, but it has not gone away. The regulation will now come into force for large companies on December 30, this year, and for smaller companies, on June 30, 2026. European operators offering hides, skins, semi-finished and finished leather to customers (inside or outside the EU) are going to have to be able to show that their material has no link to land where recent deforestation has taken place. Tapestry, the parent group of Coach, Stuart Weitzman and Kate Spade, may be in a position to help.


To read the rest of this informative article, click on Traceability.

關於亞太區皮革展 ​

我們為皮革、物料及時裝業界創造面對面洽談的機會,爲客戶締造實質商機。我們雲集世界各地的商家,讓他們尋找新的合作伙伴,發掘潛在客戶或供應商,並掌握業界最新發展。

 

我們主辦多個專注時尚及生活潮流的商貿展覽會, 為這不斷變化的行業,提供最全面的買家及參展商服務,方便他們了解急速轉變的行業環境,並預測來季趨勢。

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