Greenwashing – the deceptive tactics behind environmental claims | United Nations (original) (raw)

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Why care about greenwashing, and how does it relate to climate change?

The science is clear: greenhouse gas emissions, such as carbon and methane, from human activities are wrapping the Earth in a blanket of pollution that has warmed the planet and led to severe impacts such as more intense storms, droughts, floods and wildfires.

To limit climate change and preserve a livable planet, emissions need to be cut nearly in half by 2030 and reduced to net zero by 2050. Every fraction of a degree of warming matters and, as put by the former chair of the High-Level Expert Group on the Net-Zero Emissions Commitments of Non-State Entities, “the planet cannot afford delays, excuses, or more greenwashing”.

Greenwashing undermines credible efforts to reduce emissions and address the climate crisis. Through deceptive marketing and false claims of sustainability, greenwashing misleads consumers, investors, and the public, hampering the trust, ambition, and action needed to bring about global change and secure a sustainable planet.

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How is the UN tackling greenwashing?

Since the adoption of the Paris Agreement in 2015, an increasing number of companies have pledged to reduce their greenhouse gas emissions to net zero - a level where any remaining emissions would be absorbed by forests, the ocean or other “carbon sinks.” However, those claims are often based on questionable plans, including emissions offsetting and “insetting” – rather than actual emission cuts. As such, the transparency and integrity of such claims remain critically low and risk creating a failure to deliver urgent climate action.

In response to the rise in greenwashing in net-zero pledges, the Secretary-General established a High-Level Expert Group tasked with developing stronger and clearer standards for net-zero emissions pledges by companies, financial institutions, cities and regions, and speed up their implementation. In its report “Integrity Matters,” the Expert Group outlined ten recommendations for credible, accountable net-zero pledges and detailed the necessary considerations for each stage towards achieving net zero and addressing the climate crisis. A checklist for companies to follow is available here.

A quote by Catherine Mckenna, chair of the High Level expert group on net zero emissons. Saying To avert a climate catastophe, we need bold pledges but matched by concrete, measurable action

Following the report, UN Climate Change published a Recognition and Accountability Framework and Draft Implementation Plan to begin operationalizing the expert group’s recommendations, improve transparency and maximize the credibility of climate action pledges, plans and transition progress.

To further accelerate action and hear from “first movers and doers,” the UN Secretary-General convened a Climate Ambition Summit at the UN Headquarters in New York on 20 September 2023, designed along three tracks: ambition, credibility, and implementation - leaving “no room for back-sliders, greenwashers, blame-shifters or repackaging of announcements of previous years”.

In his pivotal speech on World Environment Day 2024, the Secretary-General called for a global ban on fossil fuel advertising and urged creative agencies to stop helping fossil fuel companies in greenwashing.

What can you do?

For more tips on actions, you can take for a healthy planet, check out the ActNow campaign.

Close-up: the fashion industry

Due to raw material extraction, long supply chains and energy-intensive production, the fashion industry is responsible for 2 to 8 per cent of global carbon emissions (for context, the shipping and aviation industry combined account for about 5 per cent of global emissions).

Significant efforts are underway to reduce the fashion industry’s pollution – including through the UN-backed Fashion Charter – but greenwashing remains a challenge. A recent report found that 60 per cent of sustainability claims by European fashion giants are “unsubstantiated” and “misleading.” This has resulted in confusion for consumers and growing mistrust of what is and is not sustainable.

But with one of the most influential marketing engines on Earth, the fashion industry has the potential to drive positive change and be a leader towards a more sustainable future, through both action and communications. The Sustainable Fashion Communication Playbook is a guide for fashion communicators – marketers, brand managers, imagemakers, media, influencers and beyond – to help counter greenwashing and advance progress towards the Paris Agreement and Sustainable Development Goals.

Learn more about…

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From the UN Secretary-General

“We must have zero tolerance for net-zero greenwashing", said the UN Chief at the launch of the report of High-Level Expert Group on Net-Zero Commitments. Read the complete speech here.

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Net Zero

What is net zero? Why is it important? Our net-zero page explains why we need steep emissions cuts now and what efforts are underway.

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Communicating on Climate Change

Beware of greenwashing when creating a communications product – such as a video, a podcast, a written article, or a graphic on Climate Change. Read here a comprehensive guide on how to make it a valuable, effective, and reliable piece of content.

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Catherine Mckenna: We need to get our act together

Chair of the High-Level Expert Group on the Net-Zero Emissions Commitments of Non-State Entities, Catherine McKenna talks about why there is an urgent need for stronger and clearer standards, and criteria for assessing net-zero commitments from non-state entities.

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Initiatives for action

Governments, businesses and civil society members are connecting in climate initiatives to speed the pace of climate action. Read more about their global initiatives here.

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Act for Our Common Future

ActNow is the United Nations campaign to inspire people to act for the Sustainable Development Goals. Learn how you can take action to reduce your impact on the environment and create a healthy planet here.