GREEN CLAIMS DRIVE DEBATE At Thinkhouse, Green Claims have been the main focus at our internal Planet ‘Fridays for Future’ training sessions over the last few weeks. Currently, there are no set definitions for terms widely used such as ‘eco friendly’, ‘sustainably produced’ or ‘natural’ in consumer law. Internationally, marketing professionals can take best-practice guidance from the World Federation of Advertisers environmental claims principles here, which reflect advice also given in the UK CMA’s ‘Green Claims Code’ – which sets out 6 key points to check your environmental claims are genuinely green. The key takeaway? Evidence, evidence, evidence. For example, Tesco was recently rebuked over claims that a plant-based burger was more environmentally friendly than their meat equivalents. The UK Advertising Standards Authority notes that the Ad “did not hold any evidence in relation to the full lifecycle of any of the products…” Read more here. On Tuesday evening Prime Time (Ireland’s investigative TV show on national broadcaster RTÉ) dedicated a whole programme to the issue. THINKHOUSE Founder Jane McDaid was invited to share her expert opinion on the matter. (watch a 2minute highlight reel Here ). The episode explains, and explores, what a move to a circular economy would mean (for Ireland) highlighting the progress made in Amsterdam. It also addresses live issues around ‘debatable’ claims coming from companies and different forms of regulation that exist. Answering the interviewer's questions, McDaid comments on the generation coming through, who are demanding more from brands and businesses: “We’re at the point right now where we really need to make it simple, understandable and also motivating and compelling for people to choose a greener path.” |