SeaVees is an American shoe retailer headquartered in Santa Barbara, California, United States. The multinational footwear company creates casual shoes for women, men, and children.

The British investment company, Pentland Group, owns SeaVees and many other brands, like JD Sports, Berghaus, Speedo, Endura, Ellesse, Mitre, Red or Dead, and more.

SeaVees is committed to protecting the sea. It regularly partners with organizations working to restore ocean ecosystems and our coasts.

SeaVees also gives back a portion of its profits to organizations that support the environment, mental health, human rights, and social justice for all.

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Sustainability Rating: 4/10

Rating FAQ

Category: Shoes

For: Women, men, children

Type: Sneakers, boots, sandals, platforms, slippers, clogs

Style: Casual

Quality: Medium

Price: $$

Sizes: 5-12 (US), 2-9 (UK), 35-42 (EU)

Fabrics: Cotton, hemp, jute, lyocell, viscose, polyester, nylon, wool, leather, polyurethane, rubber

100% Organic: No

100% Vegan: No

Ethical & Fair: Yes

Recycling: Yes

Producing countries: Belgium, Bosnia And Herzegovina, Cambodia, China, India, Italy, Japan, Malaysia, Myanmar, New Zealand, Pakistan, Portugal, Romania, Spain, Sri Lanka, Taiwan, Thailand, UK, Vietnam

Certifications: FSC, SMETA, BSCI, SA8000, LWG


Sustainability Practices

SeaVees takes wide-ranging measures toward sustainability to improve its products' social and environmental impact. It focuses on bringing communities together and supporting causes that matter to consumers.

SeaVees recognizes the role businesses play in meaningfully reducing inequalities and tackling climate change. It runs positive business activities to help people and the planet through sustainability initiatives and charitable actions.

SeaVees uses a tiny proportion of organic fabrics such as organic cotton. It also uses recycled materials such as recycled polyester and regenerated nylon.

Most of the fabrics it uses are either natural without relevant certifications, such as regular cotton, or synthetic petroleum-based fibers such as polyester, nylon, and more.

SeaVees publishes a list of all its manufacturers and some processing facilities on its corporate website, pentlandbrands.com. It works with production partners committed to building a fair, ethical, and transparent supply chain.

SeaVees manufactures its clothes in many East Asian countries where human rights and labor law violations still happen every day.

The clothing retailer does show some labor certification standards that could ensure good working conditions, decent living wages, health, safety, and other human rights for workers in its supply chain.

SeaVees has a code of conduct that applies to all its suppliers and subcontractors based on the regulations set by the International Labor Organization (ILO).

SeaVees assesses compliance with its Code of Conduct through informal visits or third-party audits with or without notice carried out by independent auditing bodies of international standing.

SeaVees doesn't use exotic animal skin, hair, fur, or angora. But it uses leather and wool to manufacture many of its products.

These animal-derived materials are cruel and unethical. They also harm the environment by producing greenhouse gases and waste. More sustainable alternatives exist.


Sustainability Goals

SeaVees has committed to reducing the environmental impact of its products. It will achieve net zero by 2032 through science-based carbon emission reductions and off-setting initiatives.

SeaVees plans to produce 100% of its packaging with more sustainable materials by 2024. It will increase recycled contents across all plastics used and minimize the amount of material used.


Buy Here

Discover SeaVees' sustainable collections at SeaVees.com.



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