Permalink: https://photo.greenpeace.org/archive/Metersbonwe-s-Product-Contains-Chemicals-27MZIFVVO3PN.htmlConceptually similarMetersbonwe's Product Contains ChemicalsGP04C4LCompleted★★★★'Toxic Threads' Metersbonwe Store in BeijingGP04C32Completed★★★★'Toxic Threads' Metersbonwe Store in BeijingGP04C34Completed★★★★'Toxic Threads' Metersbonwe Store in BeijingGP04C35Completed★★★★'Toxic Threads' Metersbonwe Store in BeijingGP04C33Completed★★★★Metersbonwe Store in BeijingGP04C36Completed★★★★Zara's Product Contains ChemicalsGP04CM6Completed★★★★Zara's Product Contains ChemicalsGP04CM9Completed★★★★Emporio Armani Product Contains ChemicalsGP04C3OCompleted★★★★View AllGP04C4MMetersbonwe's Product Contains ChemicalsThis grey Meters/bonwe Men's Sweater was tested as part of the Greenpeace 'Detox' campaign. This product contains nonylphenol ethoxylates (NPEs), which break down in the environment to form toxic, hormone-disrupting chemicals.Date:30 Apr, 2012Credit:© Alex Stoneman / GreenpeaceMaximum size:3743px X 5000pxKeywords:Chemical industry-Chemicals-Clothing-Cut outs-Detox (campaign title)-Fashion-KWCI (GPI)-Meters/bonwe-Pollutants-Product shots-Products-Textile industry-Water pollutionShoot:Products Tested for 'Toxic Threads' ReportImages of products tested for the Detox campaign. The products are featured in the Greenpeace report entitled "Toxic Threads - The Big Fashion Stitch-Up" detailing how big brands are forcing consumers to buy clothes that contain hazardous chemicals and that contribute toward toxic water pollution both when they are made, and when they are washed. A total of 141 items of clothing were purchased in April 2012 in 29 countries and regions worldwide from authorised retailers. The chemicals found included high levels of toxic phthalates in four of the garments, and cancer-causing amines from the use of certain azo dyes in two garments. NPEs were found in 89 garments (just under two thirds of those tested), showing little difference from the results of the previous investigation into the presence of these substances in sports clothing that was conducted in 2011. In addition, the presence of many other different types of potentially hazardous industrial chemicals was discovered across a number of the products tested.Related Collections:Report: 'Toxic Threads: The Big Fashion Stitch-Up' (Photos & Videos)