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Greenwashing

Greenwashing is a term used to describe marketing or communication practices that mislead consumers into believing a product, service, or organization is environmentally friendly when its actual environmental benefits are unproven, minimal, or non-existent. It involves presenting a false impression of sustainability to capitalize on public concern about environmental issues.

The term is commonly attributed to Jay Westerveld, who in 1986 used it to critique hotels’ towel

Common tactics include vague or non-specific claims such as “green” or “eco-friendly” without supporting data; the

Regulation and criticism: many jurisdictions require substantiation of environmental claims, with guidance from bodies such as

reuse
campaigns
as
a
marketing
tactic
rather
than
a
substantive
environmental
effort.
It
entered
wider
public
discourse
in
the
1990s
and
has
since
become
a
widely
used
label
for
dubious
claims
across
various
industries,
including
consumer
goods,
energy,
and
transportation.
use
of
irrelevant
or
misleading
certifications;
cherry-picking
data
to
highlight
a
single
benefit
while
ignoring
broader
impacts;
hidden
trade-offs
(for
example,
a
product
that
is
recyclable
but
produced
with
high
energy
use);
the
use
of
green
imagery
and
slogans
without
substantiation;
and
reliance
on
offsets
or
third-party
programs
without
independent
verification.
the
FTC’s
Green
Guides
in
the
United
States
and
similar
consumer-protection
regulations
in
the
European
Union.
Critics
argue
that
greenwashing
erodes
trust
and
undermines
legitimate
sustainability
efforts,
prompting
calls
for
clear,
verifiable,
and
standardized
reporting.
Best
practices
for
avoiding
greenwashing
include
transparent
lifecycle
assessments,
third-party
verification,
and
measurable,
specific
claims
tied
to
verifiable
performance.