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In January 2005, Mercedes-Benz informed PETA that all future Mercedes-Benz
models will be available with a completely leather-free option, either
direct at the dealership or via special order in all markets.
Mercedes’ announcement follows PETA’s consumer-driven campaign
to pressure the company to offer alternatives to leather for all models
of its cars. The campaign scored a stunning first step victory in 2003
when DaimlerChrysler-India agreed to make a nonleather interior an option
in all Mercedes models built and sold in that country. Campaign supporters
included actor James Cromwell (whose credits include The Sum of All
Fears, The Green Mile, The General’s Daughter,
and Babe, for which he received an Academy Award nomination),
who had asked DaimlerChrysler, maker of the Mercedes-Benz brand, for a
face-to-face meeting at its Stuttgart headquarters.
Click here to learn more.
Leather in Cars
It takes the skins of about four cows to produce the interior of just
one car. Maybach, however, requires seven cowhides, and Rolls-Royce requires
15. Bader, just one of the many leather suppliers that sell skin to car
companies, goes through 9,000 skins a day. Ultimately, PETA wants car
manufacturers to stop using leather. As a start, we want car companies
to offer a nonleather option for each model of their vehicles. We
need your help!
Because of the push from those who make money from killing animals,
automakers tripled their use of leather from 1982 to 1992, doubled it
again in the five years after that and continue to increase their use
of leather today.
According to The New York Times, "American tanneries that serve
the auto industry buy 20 percent of the 36 million hides produced domestically.
At about 45 square feet per cow, that's 58 square miles of skin—enough
to upholster Manhattan two and a half times."
Despite these shocking figures, carmakers that use leather try to absolve
themselves from responsibility by referring to leather as a "byproduct"
of the meat industry. This is just an excuse—and not even a good
one—and the U.S. Department of Agriculture's Agricultural Research
Service more accurately states that leather is "the highest value
coproduct of the meat industry." And, of course, any by-product of
the meat industry is a cruel product that contributes to killing.
Click here to donate to PETA.
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