Audio By Carbonatix
Asian fast-fashion giant Shein has chosen France as the location to open its first permanent physical outlets.
It will occupy concessions in department stores first in Paris, followed by five others in the cities of Dijon, Reims, Grenoble, Angers and Limoges.
Shein told the BBC on Thursday that France's "influential global fashion market" was a "natural choice" as the firm's testbed for physical stores.
The fashion brand has become best known for its discounted and trendy clothes, but has drawn criticism over its environmental impact and working conditions.
The company has previously opened temporary pop-up stores in cities such as Madrid and Paris, but has never operated a permanent physical shop.
The new outlets are being opened through a partnership with retail property group Societe des Grands Magasins (SGM). The French company runs the BHV Marais and Galeries Lafayette department stores that will house what Shein calls "shop-in-shop" outlets.
The outlets will create an estimated 200 jobs in France, Shein said in a statement, adding that the collaboration aimed to revitalise city centres and department stores in the country.
"By choosing France as the place to trial physical retail, Shein aims to benefit French customers and the wider retail sector," the firm said.
This comes after the French Senate adopted a bill in June to regulate the fast-fashion industry by sanctioning companies, such as Shein and rival Temu, and banning their adverts.
Shein, which ships to more than 150 countries, has primarily operated online through its website and app.
Founded in China in 2008 and headquartered in Singapore, Shein has come under scrutiny over its production of fast-fashion goods. The business model rapidly produces low-cost clothes based on the latest styles, but has drawn criticism for its environmental impact.
Concerns have also been raised about the working conditions within Shein's supply chain.
An investigation published in 2024 by Swiss advocacy group Public Eye found that workers in some suppliers at one point worked for 75 hours a week, despite Shein promising to improve conditions.
Latest Stories
-
Adongo defends BoG recapitalisation plan amid growing debate over GH¢93.82bn negative equity
5 minutes -
Ghana petitions AU over xenophobic attacks on African nationals in South Africa
14 minutes -
Shocking and perplexing – Godfred Dame slams gov’t attempts to weaken OSP
16 minutes -
GPL 2025/26: Medeama drop points as GoldStars keep title hopes alive
17 minutes -
Irresponsible court reporting erodes public trust in judiciary – CHRAJ Director warns
25 minutes -
Expose young people to courts and prisons to curb crime – Judge advocates
30 minutes -
Suame MP slams ORAL initiative as ‘illegal’ and driven by haste
34 minutes -
Gideon Boako accuses BoG of ‘accounting gimmick’ over solvency position
39 minutes -
Minority raises alarm over BoG losses, says concerns are in national interest
42 minutes -
Economic stability achieved, focus now shifts to production – Isaac Adongo
45 minutes -
Youth disillusionment poses greatest threat to Ghana’s stability – UNDP
48 minutes -
John Darko urges Mahama to complete Agenda 111 projects instead of starting new ones
51 minutes -
Ghana needs $22.6bn to tackle climate challenges – Seidu Issifu
54 minutes -
Cocoa smuggling: Fiapre Circuit Court grants GH¢10k bail each to four suspects
58 minutes -
African media criticised for weak geopolitical coverage
1 hour