Stop greenwashing: the European directive point by point

22 January 2024

After the vote in the Europarliament the final approval of the new rules against greenwashing lacks only the green light from the EU Council. This is a key law that represents a first step in eradicating the practice of greenwashing and providing transparency to consumers. The next steps are publication in the Official Journal and transposition by member states within 2 years.

The goal is to protect consumers from deceptive practices and help them in their purchasing choices, thus, banning the use of misleading environmental claims, improving product labeling, and making warranty information more visible.

The new rules aim to make product labeling clearer and more reliable by banning the use of generic environmental claims such as “environmentally friendly,” “natural,” “biodegradable,” “climate-neutral,” or “eco” without documents and certifications to prove their truthfulness and substantiation.

The greenwashing directive prohibits claiming that a product has a neutral, reduced or positive impact on the environment if these results are linked to the use of emission offsetting systems.

The use of sustainability labels will also now be regulated, given the confusion caused by their proliferation and failure to use comparative data. In the future, only sustainability labels based on official certification schemes or established by public authorities will be allowed in the EU.

The directive is closely related to another proposed directive issued last year by the European Commission and now under consideration by the EU institutions: the one on green claims, which will be more focused on environmental claims and will define in detail criteria and conditions for their proper use.

Here is the new directive point by point.

 

Social media

News

Energy efficiency of public buildings: public procurement as a driver of industrial transition

Energy efficiency of public buildings: public procurement as a driver of industrial transition

The energy renovation of public buildings is now one of the most strategic challenges of the ecological transition in Europe. Schools, hospitals, offices and public infrastructures are at the centre of a transformation that combines environmental sustainability, technological innovation, quality public spending and industrial development, turning public procurement into a powerful tool for steering markets and accelerating the evolution of energy and industrial supply chains.

Why the future of food systems depends on school meals

Why the future of food systems depends on school meals

School meals are no longer just about feeding students. Today, they represent one of the most concrete meeting points between public health, ecological transition, education policies and the transformation of food systems. Every day, millions of meals served in schools directly affect agricultural supply chains, production models, energy consumption, food waste and nutritional quality. This is also where an increasingly important part of European sustainability strategies is taking shape.

Rome strengthens Green Public Procurement: a territorial strategy for sustainable public purchasing

Rome strengthens Green Public Procurement: a territorial strategy for sustainable public purchasing

Green Public Procurement is entering a new territorial phase.
With the new Green Procurement Action Plan 2026–2029, the Metropolitan City of Rome Capital is strengthening the role of public procurement as a driver of administrative innovation, environmental sustainability and local development. A process aimed at involving public authorities, businesses and local stakeholders in the development of operational and replicable models aligned with new European strategies.