DryNites (Europe) is Kimberly-Clark’s overnight underwear brands for children experiencing bedwetting. The boycott stems not from the product itself but from parent company harms—Kimberly-Clark’s commercial footprint in Israel, history of sourcing from settlement-linked suppliers, and global labor/environment controversies.
Kimberly-Clark’s harms are layered. Its commercial presence in Israel (via Hogla-Kimberly) and historical reliance on settlement-linked suppliers entrench it in systems of dispossession and apartheid. Its continued operations in Israel also provide tax revenues and economic normalization that strengthen the state’s political and economic infrastructure.
On labor rights, the company has repeatedly been linked to suppliers accused of forced labor, underpayment, and unsafe conditions, particularly in Malaysia’s glove sector, a critical part of Kimberly-Clark’s health and hygiene product chain. These abuses reveal how the company benefits from systemic worker exploitation while publicly presenting itself as a responsible brand owner.
Environmentally, Kimberly-Clark has improved on some forest-sourcing issues but remains a major global polluter. Its ongoing use of plastics and PFAS chemicals underlines how “sustainability” reforms often mask underlying systemic harms.
Boycotting Kimberly-Clark is High Impact. Its portfolio covers everyday essentials such as tissues, diapers, feminine hygiene products that dominate supermarket shelves worldwide. Consumer pressure here not only challenges a company with documented ties to apartheid-linked suppliers but also disrupts a global actor responsible for labor exploitation and environmental degradation at scale.
Naty by Eco by Naty
Andy Pandy