Proposal C4: Report publicly on how suppliers are chosen and/or eliminated.

Report publicly on the company’s policies for supplier/vendor selection, management, and/or termination, including new source approval process, linking of supplier CSR performance with sourcing decisions, and strategy for managing impact of exiting factories.

Responses

adidas reports publicly on these issues in its Annual Sustainability Reports, and has committed to publishing its Standard Operating Procedure for the approval of new suppliers, its Guideline for enforcing workplace standards and its Standard Operating Procedure (SOP) for factory terminations on its website.

Lotto says its selection policy adheres to its Code of Conduct, but makes no commitment on CSR performance, and managing the impact of exiting factories.

Mizuno states that its selection policy and CSR performance rules our found in its internal “Group Rule of Supply Chain Management “ which it is not willing to make public; but it is willing to publish its Vendors Human Rights Checklist. The company has no policy on factory closures.

New Balance provides some general information on its selection policy, but makes no commitment on CSR performance or on managing the impact of exiting factories.

“This is something that Nike currently reports on in our Corporate Responsibility reports.”

Pentland reports information to the Ethical Trading Initiative regarding its supplier selection procedures, but this information is not available to the public. The company makes no comment on its termination policy or strategy for managing impact of exiting factories.

Puma will report on its supplier selection process in its upcoming Sustainability Report. The company makes no comment on its termination policy or strategy for managing impact of exiting factories.