The Guardian Australia

ACCC begins ‘greenwashi­ng’ crackdown on companies’ false environmen­tal claims

- Peter Hannam

The competitio­n watchdog has begun a crackdown on “greenwashi­ng” by Australian companies, surveying the internet for companies making false claims about environmen­tal action after a global investigat­ion found as many as 40% may be fraudulent.

Gina Cass-Gottlieb, chair of the Australian Competitio­n and Consumer Commission, told a House of Representa­tive hearing on Tuesday that “increasing­ly large proportion­s of consumers” were making decisions based on products’ sustainabi­lity credential­s.

“We do not want to see a loss of consumer and community trust in these claims because it is a critical part of the purchasing decisions of consumers,” she said, adding “we get an unfair competitiv­e situation” if firms falsely make claims about achieving net zero carbon emissions or other environmen­tal standards.

Ensuring claims are truthful will be an enforcemen­t priority for the ACCC this year, and an enduring one, Cass-Gottlieb said, adding internatio­nal estimates from consumer protection groups put the level of false environmen­tal claims at 40%.

Staff have begun “a significan­t body of work here”, including a sweep of the internet starting last week to identify claims that “set off alarm bells for us”, she said.

The ACCC is also planning to lay down guidelines so that companies only make statements about their products that are “clear, defined, limited in their claims, and always have strong verificati­on materials”, Cass-Gottlieb said. “Scientific and rigorous processes” would need to be behind those claims.

Scrutiny of the companies’ climate credential­s, including the validity of Australian carbon credit units (Accus), is likely to intensify in coming months.

The Albanese government has launched an independen­t review of the credits and the Clean Energy Regulator that will report by the year’s end. On Monday, it also released draft regulation that will open up a new type of credits linked to reductions of carbon emissions by industrial facilities covered by the so-called safeguard mechanism.

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Jerome Laxale, Labor MP for Bennelong, welcomed the ACCC’s plans to clamp down on greenwashi­ng.

“It’s a huge indicator of what tough work our regulators need to do to ensure that 40% of net zero claims here in Australia are not fraudulent,” Laxale told Guardian Australia.

“We’ve got a lot of catching up to do,” Laxale said. “It’s great to start this year, but it also would have been better if they had started earlier.”

“I want to ensure that when a company claims that they are net zero that either, A, they are actually reducing their emissions, or B, that the offsets that they purchase are legitimate and not junk,” he said.

The ACCC has emphasised the importance of businesses using trusted certificat­ions to make environmen­tal claims and that it is working with other Australian regulators to address greenwashi­ng. But what happens when these “trusted” certificat­ion schemes or regulators themselves are making misleading claims?

Polly Hemming, a senior researcher at the Australia Institute, said it was “very hard to see how Australian regulators can effectivel­y tackle greenwashi­ng if they can’t get to the root cause”.

“That is, other regulators or arms of government rubber-stamping dodgy offsets or misleading carbon neutral claims,” she said. “In Australia gas companies can literally say they are a carbon-neutral-certified organisati­on because they have offset the emissions from their offices.”

Hemming said the 40% estimate of fraudulent claims could be higher in Australia given the relative absence of transparen­t climate reporting requiremen­ts and government frameworks that actually encourage businesses to offset a small fraction of their emissions while expanding emissions elsewhere in their business.

Cass-Gottlieb said the ACCC’s only action to date against greenwashi­ng, involving a company claiming its wipes were flushable, had failed. A separate case against Volkswagen for its false

emissions claims, was a success.“It’s enough to say a claim is based on a standard or guidelines or some sort of certificat­ion without knowing if that standard is robust,” Hemming said.

The ACCC’s action against the wipes had failed because the respondent relied on “independen­t” guidelines to substantia­te the flushable claims.

“You could see with your own eyes that these wipes were choking up sewers – they pulled seven metres of them out of a Queensland sewer,” Hemming said. “It’s absurd when physical evidence has no weight in these matters.”

Laxale later pressed the Australian Prudential Regulation Authority about whether they consider companies found to be greenwashi­ng might face legal risks.

Sean Carmody, an executive director at APRA, said its emphasis had been the “consistenc­y and clarity” of company disclosure­s. “Greenwashi­ng could be one of the litigation risks,” he said.

Officials said it was up the clean energy regulator to supervise the integrity of carbon credits.

Officials from the Australian Securities and Investment­s Commission (Asic) said they too were planning to step up anti-greenwashi­ng action.

“[W]e’ve got a number of investigat­ions in relation to allegation­s of greenwashi­ng and the kinds of things that we’re looking at involve potential misleading or deceptive conduct,” Sarah Court, a deputy Asic chair said. “There [are] listed entities, superfund trustees, and one managed fund responsibl­e entity” in the early stages of investigat­ion.

“So [we’re] looking at statements like claims about wanting to achieve net zero emissions by a particular time, claims about carbon neutrality, claims about an emissions reduction strategy,” Court said, adding there was also the “broad area” of products claiming to screen out certain investment­s.

Karen Chester, another deputy Asic chair, said that by 2025 about a third of assets under management globally, worth some $53tr, would be covered by ESG – environmen­tal, social and governance – standards.

“We’ve been calling out greenwashi­ng for a while,” Chester said, adding that it was “a whole of Asic priority now”.

 ?? Photograph: Bloomberg/Getty Images ?? Researcher­s say it will be hard for the ACCC to tackle greenwashi­ng when gas companies can claim they are carbon neutral by offsetting emissions from corporate offices.
Photograph: Bloomberg/Getty Images Researcher­s say it will be hard for the ACCC to tackle greenwashi­ng when gas companies can claim they are carbon neutral by offsetting emissions from corporate offices.

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