Loblaw Companies Ltd. is a Canadian retailer founded in 1919 in Toronto and headquartered in Brampton, Canada. The retail company creates casual fashion for men, women, and children.

Loblaw makes clothing, accessories, shoes, and swimwear. Canadian public company, George Weston Limited, owns Loblaw, along with other brands in the fashion and beauty sector, such as Joe Fresh.

Loblaw makes self-expression achievable with affordable fashion. It operates 2,400 stores across Canada and is one of Canada's top 100 employers, with 190,000 Canadians employed in full and part-time positions.

Loblaw creates positive environmental and social change by reducing the impact of its operations on the environment and improving its approach to waste management, packaging, energy use, and more.

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Sustainability Rating: 3/10

Rating FAQ

Category: Clothing, accessories, shoes

For: Women, men, children

Type: Basics, denim, dresses, knitwear, activewear, underwear, loungewear, swimwear, outerwear, nightwear, sneakers, boots, heels

Style: Casual

Quality: Low

Prices: $

Sizes: 2XS-3XL, 0-24 (US), 2-26 (UK), 32-54 (EU), 2-26 (AU), plus

Fabrics: Cotton, linen, modal, viscose, polyester, nylon, spandex, acrylic, neoprene, polyurethane, rubber, leather, wool, silk

100% Organic: No

100% Vegan: No

Ethical & Fair: No

Recycling: Yes

Producing countries: Bangladesh, Cambodia, China, India, Pakistan, Thailand, Vietnam

Certifications: no certification


Sustainability Practices

Loblaw takes wide-ranging measures to protect biodiversity, reduce its consumption of water, energy, and other resources, avoid waste, and combat climate change.

It wants to be better and more efficient by looking at every aspect of its value chain to ensure the healthy functioning of our planet. However, the majority of its business remains detrimental to the environment.

Loblaw only uses a tiny proportion of organic materials, such as organic cotton, or recycled materials, such as recycled polyester and regenerated nylon.

Most of the fabrics it uses are either natural without relevant certifications, such as regular cotton or linen, or synthetic petroleum-based fibers, such as polyester, nylon, acrylic, and more.

Loblaw also uses a small proportion of semi-synthetic fibers or regenerated cellulosic fabrics such as modal and viscose.

Loblaw publishes a list of all its manufacturers on its corporate website, Loblaw.ca. It aims to improve safety and transparency within its international supply chain.

Loblaw works with leading international apparel brands, non-governmental agencies, and labor groups to improve working conditions for millions of garment workers globally.

Loblaw manufactures its clothes in many East Asian countries, where human rights and labor law violations happen every day.

The Canadian clothing retailer doesn't show any labor certification standard that would ensure good working conditions, decent living wages, health, safety, and other crucial rights for workers in its supply chain.

Loblaw has a code of conduct that applies to all its suppliers and subcontractors to provide standards on protecting human rights,
adhering to applicable employment standards and providing safe working conditions for workers.

Loblaw assesses compliance with its Code of Conduct by informal visits or third-party audits with or without notice. It works with third-party experts to conduct compliance audits using a best-practice audit framework.

Loblaw doesn't use exotic animal skin, hair, fur, or angora. But it uses leather, wool, and silk to manufacture many of its clothing pieces.

These animal-derived materials are cruel and unethical. They also harm the environment by producing greenhouse gases and waste. More sustainable alternatives exist.



Sustainability Goals

Loblaw has committed to reducing its environmental impact across the entire supply chain. It has a responsibility to make a positive impact on the communities it serves.

Loblaw plans to reduce its enterprise-wide operational carbon footprint by 50% by 2030, against a 2020 baseline. It will achieve net-zero emissions by 2040 for its enterprise Scope 1 and Scope 2 emissions and Scope 3 by 2050.

Loblaw will also reduce plastic waste by making all control-brand and in-store packaging recyclable or reusable by 2025.

Loblaw plans to send zero food to landfill by 2030, and over the next 24 months achieve measurable food waste reductions in every one of its stores.

Loblaw has committed to converting 100% of its Loblaw cotton-rich direct programs to sustainable cotton by 2025.



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