New Era

France tightens ad rules against ‘greenwashi­ng’

- - Nampa/AFP

PARIS - New advertisin­g rules in France will make it more difficult for firms to claim that their products and services are “carbon neutral”, as experts push for stronger internatio­nal regulation to tackle company greenwashi­ng.

The measures, which came into force on 1 January, come after United Nations experts issued a raft of new guidelines aimed at drawing a “red line” around bogus net zero claims. The French government has said the goal is to provide transparen­t informatio­n for the public, to “progressiv­ely strengthen the commitment­s of advertiser­s”, and to combat “greenwashi­ng”.

The new rules mean that if a product is advertised as having net zero emissions, then the company will need to provide annual details of all the carbon pollution associated with that product’s entire life cycle, from production to disposal or recycling.

It must explain how greenhouse gas emissions will be avoided as a priority, then reduced, and finally “offset”.

Advertisin­g or packaging bearing the claim of carbon neutrality must also include a link to a website detailing the climate plan.

But observers warn that companies still have too much room to make misleading environmen­tal statements in their advertisin­g.

“This type of claim should simply be banned,” said Anne Bringault of the Climate Action Network (CAN).

The new recommenda­tions from UN experts, published in November at the COP27 talks in Egypt’s Sharm el-Sheikh, say firms cannot claim to be netzero if they invest in new fossil fuels, cause deforestat­ion, or offset emissions with carbon credits instead of reducing them.

UN chief Antonio Guterres has called for netzero pledges to be updated within a year to meet the criteria.

In November, French climate activists from the associatio­n Notre Affaire A Tous said they had filed complaints with advertisin­g regulators in several European countries over claims that the football World Cup in Qatar would be carbon- neutral.

Also last year, Britain’s Advertisin­g Standards Authority hit out at HSBC for adverts promoting its green initiative­s that failed to highlight the bank’s contributi­ons to greenhouse gas emissions, and banned further use of the posters.

Britain’s financial watchdog has also proposed toughening regulation­s of environmen­tal claims, including of investment product sustainabi­lity labels and restrictio­ns on terms such as “green”, “sustainabl­e” and “ESG” (environmen­tal, social and governance).

 ?? Photo: Greenpeace ?? Green rules… New rules in France mean that if a product is advertised as having net zero emissions, the company will need to provide annual details of all the carbon pollution associated with that product’s entire life cycle.
Photo: Greenpeace Green rules… New rules in France mean that if a product is advertised as having net zero emissions, the company will need to provide annual details of all the carbon pollution associated with that product’s entire life cycle.

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