Givenchy publishes no brand-level emissions data despite being a major luxury fashion house. Its parent LVMH shows mixed climate progress—Scope 1+2 cuts offset by flat Scope 3 absolute emissions and intensity-based targets that sidestep real reduction. Supply chain deforestation linkage unresolved; exotic animal materials and limited supplier transparency are persistent gaps.
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SINK = (0.3 × Base + 0.7 × Performance) × ScaleStrongest on Controversies & Red Flags and Energy Source (6/10, 4/10). Weakest on Emissions Trajectory and Carbon Footprint — Supply Chain (2/10, 2/10).
12 sources used in this assessment. All publicly available. Each row shows which rubric questions it informed.
8 of 12 sources are third-party verified or public record.
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Among the 17 major apparel (fast fashion) brands we've scored, Givenchy sits 9th of 17.
Score history begins 9 April 2026.
As Givenchy's score updates, the trajectory will appear here.
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Givenchy is a French luxury fashion and fragrance house founded in 1952, headquartered in Paris. Owned by LVMH since 1988, it operates global retail stores, ateliers, and supply chains spanning leather goods, ready-to-wear, and prestige cosmetics and perfumes.
Luxury fashion peer with stronger absolute Scope 3 targets and higher supply chain transparency standards.
View breakdown →Parent company; exhibits same intensity-based Scope 3 framing and mixed climate policy alignment issues.
View breakdown →Fast-fashion competitor with greater emissions disclosure maturity and faster circularity progress.
View breakdown →Luxury peer facing similar exotic materials and deforestation supply chain controversies.
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