The Canadian government has taken a strong stand against greenwashing,
officially condemning marketing terms such as "green" and "eco" that appear
without proper product lifecycle analysis.
The Bureau said the guidelines are designed to help businesses interpret the
ISO
14021 standard on self-descriptive environmental labelling.
Businesses have a year to transition their labelling and advertising
strategies to follow the guidelines. Companies that contravene them may incur
investigation by the Bureau, which reserves the right to take immediate action
before the 12-month deadline in particularly blatant cases of greenwashing.
"It goes beyond the labelling of a product and deals with advertising too,"
said Brendan Ross, major case director for misleading advertising and labelling
at the Bureau. "We want to ensure that the information going to consumers is
accurate and not false."
This is the first time that the government has updated its position on
environmental labelling since Industry and Science Canada published its 1993
document Principles and Guidelines for Environmental Labeling and
Advertising (PEGLA). The non-profit, member-funded CSA had published a set
of guidelines for interpreting ISO 14021 in 2000, but the government was not
involved. The public also had to pay for the original document, says Ross.
Advertising Standards Canada, a
self-policing industry body which publishes an advertising code, insisted that
it has not seen many complaints of greenwashing. "I am not aware of it being a
big issue at this time, but efforts are more preventative," said vice president
of standards Janet Feasby, although she added that complaints could rise in the
future.
In contrast, Ross alleges that complaints received by the Bureau about
exaggerated green claims are already growing.
The move by the Canadian government is the latest in a series of measures
globally designed to ensure firms do not overstate their green credentials in
the rush to attract environmentally conscious customers.
The UK advertising watchdog the Advertising Standards Association has said in
recent months that it will be paying particularly
close
attention to green claims, while the US Federal Trade Commission is
undertaking a review of its guidelines governing environmental advertising.
Meanwhile, Australian regulator the Australian Competition and Consumer
Commission last week handed out one of the most
punitive
rulings against a company's green claims yet, forcing tyre manufacturer
Goodyear to offer partial refunds to customers over unsubstantiated claims that
its Eagle LS2000 tyre range had "little environmental impact" and resulted in
lower CO2 emissions.
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