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How to Detect Greenwashing: A Practical Guide for Businesses

Analytics dashboard for greenwashing detection and compliance monitoring

Greenwashing costs businesses millions in fines and consumer trust. With the EU ECGT Directive enforcement starting September 2026, detecting greenwashing in your own marketing — and your competitors' — has never been more important.

What Is Greenwashing?

Greenwashing is the practice of making misleading environmental claims to appear more sustainable than reality supports. It ranges from vague buzzwords ("eco-friendly") to outright false claims ("100% carbon neutral" through offset purchases).

The 7 Sins of Greenwashing

TerraChoice identified these common greenwashing patterns, all of which the ECGT Directive now addresses:

  1. Sin of the Hidden Trade-Off: Highlighting one green attribute while ignoring significant environmental impacts elsewhere
  2. Sin of No Proof: Making claims that cannot be substantiated with accessible evidence
  3. Sin of Vagueness: Using broad terms like "natural" or "green" without definition
  4. Sin of Irrelevance: Making truthful but unhelpful claims (e.g., "CFC-free" when CFCs are already banned)
  5. Sin of Lesser of Two Evils: Making green claims about an inherently harmful product category
  6. Sin of Fibbing: Making factually false environmental claims
  7. Sin of Worshipping False Labels: Using fake certification logos or self-created labels

How to Detect Greenwashing on Websites

Step 1: Look for Generic Claims

Search for terms like "eco-friendly", "sustainable", "green", "natural", "carbon neutral". Under ECGT, these require substantiation.

Step 2: Check for Evidence

For each claim found, ask: Is there a link to a certification, a third-party audit, or specific data backing this claim? If not, it's likely greenwashing.

Step 3: Verify Certifications

If a sustainability label is displayed, verify it's a recognized certification (EU Ecolabel, FSC, MSC, B Corp) and not a self-created logo.

Step 4: Check Offset Claims

Claims of "carbon neutral" or "climate neutral" that rely on purchasing carbon credits are now restricted under ECGT Art. 3(4).

Step 5: Automated Scanning

Manual checks don't scale. Use automated tools to scan your entire website — including meta tags, alt text, and dynamically loaded content — against the full list of 28 ECGT-regulated terms.

Red Flags to Watch For

  • Environmental claims without links to evidence or certifications
  • Use of green imagery (leaves, trees, earth) without substantive claims
  • Claims about future sustainability goals without current actions
  • Prominent display of carbon offset purchases as "carbon neutral"
  • Self-created "eco" labels or badges
  • Vague percentages without baselines ("50% less emissions" — compared to what?)

Tools for Detection

MethodCoverageSpeedAccuracy
Manual review1 page/hourSlowHigh
ECGT pattern matching1 page/secondFastGood (28 terms)
ClimateBERT AI1 page/3 secondsMediumVery good (86%)
Combined (pattern + AI)1 page/3 secondsMediumBest

Greenwashing Detection: In-Depth Guides

Go deeper on each aspect of greenwashing detection:

Related Resources

Don't Wait for Enforcement

September 2026 is closer than you think. Start scanning today.

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