Greenwashing Increases the Corporate Credibility Gap

 

Thoughtful article by Mallen Baker in the UK publication Ethical Corporation, discussing a number of specific companies who’ve been called on the carpet for greenwashing: claiming to be more ecological than they really are.

As one among many examples:

Shell, which said “we use our waste CO2 to grow flowers”, was in breach of the advertising code because the wording could be seen to imply that all the company’s waste CO2 was so used, not just 0.33 per cent of it.

The result of this corporate misfeasance is not surprising. As Baker notes,

According to a recent survey, 80 per cent of Britons now think that companies simply pretend to be ethical in order to sell more products. Widespread cynicism over all the claims has set in, and is hardening with every ill-judged poster or TV ad. Nobody can see an ad with flower petals floating from the exhaust of a motor car and be anything other than cynical.

Oil companies are often making green claims, which I’ve learned to treat with skepticism. Yet I admit to being fooled occasionally. I once profiled BP as the socially responsible company of the month in my Positive Power of Principled Profit newsletter on the basis of its stated policies and actions on environmental responsibility. Later, I found out that BP still has quite its share of environmental problems, even disasters.

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2 comments:

  1. » Greenwashing Increases the Corporate Credibility Gap (Pingback), 13. January 2008, 0:09
     

    [...] unknown wrote an interesting post today onHere’s a quick excerptThoughtful article by Mallen Baker in the UK publication Ethical Corporation, discussing a number of specific companies who’ve been called on the carpet for greenwashing: claiming to be more ecological than they really are. … [...]

     
  2. Patrick Byers, 20. January 2008, 16:31

    Shel,

    Another great post. It’s sad that ‘green marketing’ has become such a target for cynicism, especially since it its center, it’s all good.

    If more companies sought “principled profit” and practiced “responsible marketing,” the world would be a better place, wouldn’t it?

    Keep up the great work.

    Patrick Byers
    President + CEO
    Outsource Marketing
    http://outsourcemarketing.com

    The Responsible Marketing Blog
    http://responsiblemarketing.com

     

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