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Honesty in Marketing: European Parliament Bans Unfounded Environmental Claims

Honesty in Marketing: European Parliament Bans Unfounded Environmental Claims

Greenwashing
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  • Generic environmental claims and other misleading product information will be outlawed
  • Only sustainability labels based on approved certification schemes or established by public authorities will be allowed
  • Guarantee information has to be more visible and a new guarantee extension label will be introduced

Parliament has given its final green light to a directive that will improve product labelling and ban the use of misleading environmental claims.

The directive adopted today with 593 votes in favour, 21 against and 14 abstentions seeks to protect consumers from misleading marketing practices and help them make better purchasing choices. To achieve this, a number of problematic marketing habits related to greenwashing and the early obsolescence of goods will be added to the EU list of banned commercial practices.

More accurate and reliable advertising

Most importantly, the new rules aim to make product labelling clearer and more trustworthy by banning the use of general environmental claims like “environmentally friendly”, “natural”, “biodegradable”, “climate neutral” or “eco” without proof.

The use of sustainability labels will also now be regulated, given the confusion caused by their proliferation and failure to use comparative data. In the future, only sustainability labels based on official certification schemes or established by public authorities will be allowed in the EU.

Additionally, the directive will ban claims that a product has a neutral, reduced or positive impact on the environment because of emissions offsetting schemes.

Related Article: EU Cracks Down on Greenwashing with Stringent Carbon Removal Certification

Durability in focus

Another important objective of the new law is making producers and consumers focus more on the durability of goods. In the future, guarantee information has to be more visible and a new, harmonised label will be created to give more prominence to goods with an extended guarantee period.

The new rules will also ban unfounded durability claims (for example saying that a washing machine will last for 5,000 washing cycles if this is not true under normal conditions), prompts to replace consumables earlier than strictly necessary (often the case with printer ink, for example), and presenting goods as repairable when they are not.

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