In an era where climate change is front-page news and consumers are increasingly seeking sustainable products and services, it’s no surprise that companies want to be seen as environmentally friendly. But not all "green" marketing is created equal. Enter greenwashing—a deceptive practice that can mislead well-meaning consumers and damage trust in the clean energy transition.
Greenwashing is when a company or organization spends more time and money marketing itself as environmentally friendly than actually minimizing its environmental impact. In short, it’s a form of deceptive marketing used to appear “green” without doing the hard work behind the scenes.
Coined in the 1980s, the term originally described hotels asking guests to reuse towels "for the environment," when in reality the motivation was purely cost-saving. Since then, greenwashing has evolved and become more sophisticated—and sometimes harder to spot.
Whether you’re evaluating a product, service, or company, here are some red flags to watch for:
Phrases like “eco-friendly,” “green,” or “natural” without context or third-party verification are red flags.
Highlighting a small sustainable action while ignoring larger harms.
Using outdated or meaningless badges to appear credible.
Overuse of visuals like leaves, forests, and water to distract from weak environmental performance.
Failure to disclose emissions data, energy sources, or sustainability metrics.
Greenwashing isn’t just a PR problem—it can be legally risky. If a company makes false or misleading environmental claims, it may cross the line into fraud or false advertising.
One of the most effective tools in combating greenwashing in the real asset sector is the GRESB Assessment.
GRESB (Global Real Estate Sustainability Benchmark) is an industry-led organization that evaluates the environmental, social, and governance (ESG) performance of real assets—including infrastructure and real estate portfolios.
If a renewable energy developer claims their portfolio is “net zero,” GRESB requires them to submit verifiable emissions data, energy mix details, and improvement plans. A good score shows real progress; a poor score may reveal greenwashing.
At PureSky Energy, we support ESG transparency and the use of trusted frameworks like GRESB to hold ourselves and the industry accountable.
Great question. Checking a company’s environmental claims—and spotting greenwashing—takes a bit of digging, but here’s a step-by-step guide using reliable tools and questions to ask:
Search tip:
Google the company name + “greenwashing,” “sustainability lawsuit,” or “advertising ban.”
Ask:
Use sources like:
Legit certifications:
Watch out for self-created “green” logos or seals. These often mean nothing.
Question |
Why It Matters |
Is this claim specific and measurable? |
Vague = greenwashing. |
Is the company reducing actual emissions or just buying offsets? |
Offsets can obscure real pollution. |
Are third parties verifying the data? |
Self-reporting = less credible. |
Is the company doing more than just marketing? |
Big ad campaigns with small changes = PR stunt. |
What does the company’s full business model rely on? |
A polluting business model can't be greenwashed forever. |
Greenwashing undermines real progress in climate action. It confuses consumers, penalizes honest companies, and can delay urgent climate solutions. At PureSky Energy, we’re committed to transparency and real impact—from the way we build and manage our solar projects to how we talk about them.
We believe informed consumers are empowered consumers. That’s why we encourage everyone to ask questions, seek third-party certifications, and look for detailed disclosures when evaluating “green” claims.
Greenwashing might be common, but it’s not unstoppable. The more we learn to identify it—and support credible accountability tools like GRESB—the more we can push companies to walk the talk.
Because the planet doesn’t need more green logos—it needs real green action.