KEY POINTS
  • P&G will stop using badger hair to make its high-end Art of Shaving products after animal rights group PETA sounded alarms over industry abuses in China.
  • PETA is pressuring other companies that make shaving, painting, and makeup brushes to follow P&G's lead

Procter & Gamble is discontinuing the use of badger hair in its high-end Art of Shaving products after PETA sounded alarms over the animals' brutal treatment at farms in mainland China.

P&G said its shaving subsidiary will immediately stop buying the hair and will sell off its existing inventory, which ranges in price from $30 for an entry-level brush to $250 for its Silvertip Engraved brush. It's also looking to develop alternatives to animal hair, P&G said in a statement. Most of the world's badger hair used in shaving, makeup and paint brushes originates from mainland China where the animal doesn't have the same protections as in North America and most of Europe.