Greenwashing in Practice

Common Greenwashing Tactics in the Market

  1. Rebranding Without Reform
    • Companies relaunch products with green labels, earth-tone packaging, or nature imagery, without changing the underlying materials or production methods.
      • Example: A bottled water company highlighting “eco-conscious” branding while continuing to use single-use plastic without a recycling program.
  2. Token ESG Efforts ("Sustainability Theater")
    • Launching a single, small-scale initiative (e.g., tree planting or carbon offset campaign) and over-promoting it to suggest comprehensive environmental reform.
  3. Carbon Neutrality Claims with Flawed Offsets
    • Declaring a product “carbon neutral” by purchasing cheap or unverifiable offsets instead of reducing emissions at the source.
      • Note: Many carbon offset markets lack transparency, permanence, or additionality, undermining their legitimacy.
  4. Omitting Scope 3 Emissions
    • Highlighting reductions in Scope 1 and 2 emissions (from direct operations and purchased energy) while ignoring Scope 3 (supply chain, product use, and end-of-life).
  5. Selective Disclosure ("Cherry-Picking")
    • Reporting only positive sustainability metrics while omitting poor performance areas (e.g., disclosing water savings while ignoring labor violations in supply chains).

Real-World Examples of Greenwashing

Volkswagen Dieselgate (2015)

VW marketed “clean diesel” vehicles while installing software to cheat emissions tests. This became a landmark greenwashing scandal resulting in billions in fines and massive reputational damage.

H&M’s “Conscious” Collection

Criticized for using vague sustainability claims and offering little transparency on production impacts. A 2022 Norwegian investigation found misleading marketing around garment sustainability.

Chevron’s “We Agree” Campaign

A high-budget ad campaign promoting environmental and social values, while the company faced lawsuits over oil spills and ongoing pollution.