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For many years, Canada Goose has been the subject of widespread criticism from animal rights groups due to its utilization of animal fur, such as coyote fur, on a variety of its jackets and parkas.
Canada Goose has finally surrendered in a long, bloody battle with animal-rights groups. The Toronto-based company said Thursday it will no longer use fur to manufacture its pricey winter coats ...
Canada Goose will stop purchasing fur in 2021 and end all manufacturing with fur by the end of 2022. It previously defended using fur trims, saying these disrupt air flow and guard against frostbite.
Popular luxury parka brand Canada Goose announced Wednesday that it will no longer sell coats with virgin fur trim. Instead, as part of a new pledge to commit to operating sustainably, the company ...
Canada Goose said Thursday it will stop buying fur by the end of this year and cease manufacturing fur products no later than the end of 2022. Canada Goose is icing out the fur trims on its jackets.
Canada Goose has pledged to completely phase out the use of animal fur in its products by next year, following a series of other apparel companies that have unveiled similar plans after years of ...
Fur is flying between animal-rights group PETA and the FDNY Foundation over outerwear-maker Canada Goose. The Foundation partnered with Canada Goose to produce and sell a limited-edition ...
Winter clothing maker Canada Goose announced Thursday that the firm will stop purchasing fur by the end of this year and will go fur-free by the end of 2022.
As part of this effort, Canada Goose, which is based in Toronto, plans to begin buying back the fur ruffs from customers’ coats — with the intention of recycling the fur — in the coming months.
“Canada Goose is always the name that people relate to, but there are so many other brands that make similar coats,” says Mark Downey, CEO of Fur Harvesters Auction Inc. of North Bay, Ontario.
Many of them are not aware of the cruelty that goes into a Canada Goose jacket. That’s why we’re out here, to show that there is no such thing as humane fur or down,” said Horn.
Canada Goose said it plans to stop using fur from freshly killed coyotes to make its pricey parkas — but the company denied it's caving to pressure from animal-rights groups.