London<\/strong> – Fashion house leader Stella McCartney is set to increase its cruelty-free range once again.<\/p>\n
The UK-based company, which aims to produce sustainable clothing and accessories, will release its new vegan Reclypse sneakers later this month.<\/p>\n
The shoes feature lining created from econyl, a regenerated nylon which is sourced from pre-and post-consumer waste like fishing nets and carpet.<\/p>\n
The sneakers, handmade in Italy, have a recycled polyester upper, as well as a tractor sole containing plant-based and renewable materials. They also feature contrast panels of vegan leather and mesh.<\/p>\n
###<\/p>\n
London<\/strong> – Iconic musician and vegan\u00a0Bryan Adams\u00a0has described the link between the coronavirus\u00a0and\u00a0factory farming<\/a>\u00a0as sickening.<\/p>\n
The star, who recently called for all wet markets to be shut, made the comment in a recent\u00a0Instagram video<\/a>\u00a0to his 759,000 followers.<\/p>\n
Adams isn\u2019t the only vegan celebrity to point out the correlation. Actors\u00a0Joaquin Phoenix and Rooney Mara<\/a>\u00a0penned an op-ed for\u00a0The Washington Post\u00a0<\/em>blasting factory farms for \u2018breeding contagions like the coronavirus\u2019.<\/p>\n
The report\u00a0<\/a>has predicted that the plant-based food market will exceed\u00a0$162 billion\u00a0within the next decade. A growing preference for sustainable, healthier foods is pushing the movement.<\/p>\n
The\u00a0plant-based food market<\/a>\u00a0was valued at $29.4 billion in 2020. This means if BI\u2019s predictions are correct, the market will soar by 451 percent.<\/p>\n
A 2018 study published in\u00a0Elementa: Science of the Anthropocene<\/a>\u00a0found that we already grow enough food to feed the 9.7 billion people that are anticipated to be on Earth by 2050. But large amounts of it are funnelled into animal agriculture.<\/p>\n