Greenwashing in Canadian Firms: An Assessment of Environmental Claims
Canadians are becoming increasingly concerned about the environmental performance of firms, and are also seeking the environmental information on consumer products. Consequently, almost every Canadian firm takes the environment‘ topic as hot to its marketing policies and promoting greenness‘ to benefit from self-declared environmental claims. However, many firms advertise the eco-friendly practices hiding their real activities; the practice called green washing, which causes the stakeholders to doubt the sincerity of green marketing of all firms. Therefore, the environmental claims must be verifiable if consumers and other stakeholders are to understand the value of the environmental information the companies highlight. The primary purpose of this paper is to find out how and why the Canadian companies practice green washing. Secondly, to identify the stakeholders who demand the environmental information relating to the product‘s entire lifecycle and can examine the attributes of environmental claim to recognize green washers. Using the ―Seven Sins of Green washing model, Canadian Standard Association guidelines, and world best practices, we examined, in a sample of consumer products with the self-declared environmental claim, whether the claim might be false, misleading and deceptive or accurate, meaningful, and reliable. We found a considerable amount of green washing attributes in environmental claims by Canadian firms.
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