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Extreme heat puts garment factory employees at threat, study programs

Workers in some of the world's. biggest garment manufacturing centers in Bangladesh, Vietnam, and. Pakistan are significantly exposed to severe heat as climate. change pushes temperature levels up, a report discovered on Sunday, a. problem international retailers and brand names will have to assist. address.

Brand-new European Union policies make merchants offering in the. bloc, like Inditex, H&M and Nike, legally liable for conditions. at their providers, putting pressure on them to assist fund. enhancements to cool factories they source from.

In Dhaka, Hanoi, Ho Chi Minh City, Phnom Penh and Karachi,. the number of days with wet-bulb temperatures - a measurement. that accounts for air temperature in addition to humidity - above. 30.5 degrees Celsius jumped by 42% in 2020-2024 compared to. 2005-2009, scientists at Cornell University's International Labor. Institute discovered.

Above that threshold, the International Labor Organisation. recommends as much rest as work in any given hour to preserve. safe core body temperature level levels.

The report recognized only 3 merchants - Nike, Levi's,. and VF Corp - which specifically consist of protocols to secure. workers from heat exhaustion in their provider codes of conduct.

BUSINESS WARNED

We've been talking to brands for ages now about this concern,. and they're just now beginning to turn their attention to it,. Jason Judd, executive director at Cornell University's Global. Labor Institute, informed Reuters.

If a brand or retailer understands that temperatures in a. production location are exceedingly high or doing damage to employee. health, then they're obligated under this new set of guidelines to do. something about it, he added.

The EU Corporate Sustainability Charge Diligence Directive came. into force in July and will begin applying to large companies. from mid-2027.

Repairs to cool factories might include much better ventilation and. water evaporative cooling systems, instead of energy-intensive. and expensive cooling that would increase. manufacturers' carbon emissions.

Some factory owners would likely be willing to make such. financial investments themselves, offered how heat stress considerably. effects performance, Judd stated, however the EU rules highlight. brand names' obligation to deal with the issue too.

The report likewise advised sellers and brands to purchase. greater salaries and health care so that employees can manage. the threat of missing out on work days due to heatwaves.

Severe heat and flooding could remove $65 billion in clothing. export incomes from Bangladesh, Cambodia, Pakistan and Vietnam. by 2030, research study from asset supervisor Schroders and the Global. Labor Institute discovered in 2015.

(source: Reuters)