Skip to content
  • About
  • Partner with Us
  • Indonesia
  • Subscribe
  • Log In
Primary Menu
  • Home
  • Latest
  • Topics
  • News
  • Brief
  • Interview
  • Opinion
  • Figure
  • Infographic
  • Video
  • Community
  • Partner
  • Press Release
  • Youth
  • Global
  • Brief
  • Featured

Introducing Greenwashing and How to Spot It

Greenwashing might be the dark side of how sustainability is becoming more mainstream. How can we avoid it?
by Nazalea Kusuma June 29, 2023
Greenwashing Illustration

Illustration: Irhan Prabasukma.

The world continues to change, and even when the changes are for the better, new challenges arise. As climate change gets worse, many of us are scrambling for a way to help save the planet. More and more, we see products, services, and lifestyles labeled with “sustainable” and other sustainability-related terms. Unfortunately, this trend brings forth greenwashing. 

What is greenwashing, and why is it bad?

Recent market research found that people are willing to pay more for products and services that are more sustainable than others. With the general public’s climate change awareness at an all-time high, businesses and governments are starting to respond. They start competing, claiming their products, services, and programs are green and eco-friendly. However, 40% of these claims are baseless. 

Greenwashing is a marketing or communication strategy to make something appear more sustainable than it actually is. The “green” part of “greenwashing” is primarily about the environment. However, sustainability isn’t just about the environment; it has other aspects, such as social and economic. So, false claims about social responsibility – sometimes called bluewashing – also count.

In short, greenwashing is a form of lying that harms the planet and its people. This practice bears negative impacts on our collective efforts toward sustainability. When consumers feel deceived, they become more skeptical and distrustful of sustainability campaigns and solutions, including legitimate ones. Worse, greenwashing can act as a mask for perpetrators as they continue their harmful business-as-usual practices behind it. 

What does greenwashing look like?

There are several signs to watch out for so we can recognize greenwashing. Here are some of the most common examples of greenwashing practices:

  • First Impressions – the use of nature imagery, literal green packaging, or sustainability buzzwords such as “natural”, “eco-friendly”, and “green”. In greenwashing practices, these claims have no proof or supporting evidence.
  • Smoke and Mirrors – the grand promotion of a sustainable practice, product, or initiative to obscure the harmful activities making up most of their practices. For example, companies that use recyclable packaging yet dump their toxic waste in the river; environmentally friendly practices at companies that underpay their workers; and highly promoting one sustainable product while the rest of them are harmful with no intention of changing.
  • Impostors Among Us – the use of weak, biased, or not science-based ‘proof’ and certifications to back their sustainability claims. Official-looking labels and certificates aren’t always legitimate. Sometimes, companies and organizations even cheat their way into credentials.
  • Buy Buy Buy – the promotion of sustainable options that encourage consumption. It’s often forgotten that the first step of sustainable production and consumption is to reduce. Be wary of lifestyle advice, programs, or products that encourage consumers to buy more and more, even when they’re the more sustainable options.
  • Handwashing – the placing of responsibility mainly on individual consumers and citizens. While we all feel the impacts of climate change, we are not all equally responsible for causing it. Therefore, our actions and decisions carry different weights in saving the planet and its people. For instance, people using plastic bags at traditional markets and multinational companies generating harmful waste worldwide have differently scaled impacts on the environment. 

What can be done? 

Systemic foundations are needed to address greenwashing. There are already several certifications related to sustainability for various sectors. However, the share of the burden belongs to governments to create robust laws and legislation to tackle greenwashing at the industry level. 

Most recently, the International Sustainability Standards Board (ISSB) issued two IFRS Sustainability Disclosure Standards in June 2023, effective January 1, 2024. IFRS S1 is the General Requirements for Disclosure of Sustainability-related Financial Information, and IFRS S2 is the Climate-related Disclosures. Applying these standards is not mandatory, but governments may decide to require it of companies.

The simplest step to address greenwashing is raising awareness. Most people want to be more sustainable but don’t know how to do it right. Public education, campaigns, and even something as easy as talking about it with your peers in your community can help. Greenwashing might be the dark side of how sustainability is becoming more mainstream. Still, it shouldn’t stop us from looking for solutions and trying to do better for people and the planet.


Subscribe to Green Network Asia
Strengthen your personal and professional development with cross-sectoral insights on sustainability-related issues and sustainable development across the Asia Pacific and beyond.
Select Your Subscription Plan
Nazalea Kusuma
Editor at Green Network Asia | Website |  + postsBio

Naz is the Manager for International Digital Publications at Green Network Asia. She once studied Urban and Regional Planning and has lived in multiple cities across Southeast Asia. This personal experience has exposed her to diverse peoples & cultures and enriched her perspectives. Naz is an experienced and passionate writer, editor, translator, and creative designer with a decade worth of portfolio.

  • Nazalea Kusuma
    https://greennetwork.asia/author/nazalea/
    Living with Less: Does TikTok’s Underconsumption Core promote sustainable living?
  • Nazalea Kusuma
    https://greennetwork.asia/author/nazalea/
    Brain Rot and Its Impacts on Mental Health and Cognitive Abilities
  • Nazalea Kusuma
    https://greennetwork.asia/author/nazalea/
    Addressing the Challenges in Ecosystem-based Adaptation (EbA) Implementation
  • Nazalea Kusuma
    https://greennetwork.asia/author/nazalea/
    Dark Side of the Light: How light pollution affects people and the planet

Continue Reading

Previous: Better Dementia Prevention, Intervention, and Care Needed as Cases Rise Globally
Next: Exploring Sustainability in Coldplay’s Music of the Spheres World Tour

Related Stories

Vegetable farming How Plant the Emirates Aims to Support Food Self-Sufficiency in the UAE
  • Exclusive
  • Featured
  • Soft News

How Plant the Emirates Aims to Support Food Self-Sufficiency in the UAE

by Attiatul Noor July 4, 2025
figure of houses and pipes that emit smoke GRI’s Updated Sustainability Standards on Climate Change and Energy
  • Exclusive
  • Featured
  • Soft News

GRI’s Updated Sustainability Standards on Climate Change and Energy

by Kresentia Madina July 3, 2025
Charcoal chip and charcoal ashes. Looking into Biochar as a Bioremediation Agent
  • Featured
  • Soft News

Looking into Biochar as a Bioremediation Agent

by Ayu Nabilah July 2, 2025
a tuvalu flag Australian Climate Visa for Citizens of Tuvalu: Showcasing cross-border partnership in light of the climate crisis
  • Featured
  • Soft News

Australian Climate Visa for Citizens of Tuvalu: Showcasing cross-border partnership in light of the climate crisis

by Kresentia Madina July 1, 2025
Small Islands in the middle of Raja Ampat seas Nickel Mining in Raja Ampat and the Widespread Cost of Natural Resource Exploitation
  • Featured
  • Soft News

Nickel Mining in Raja Ampat and the Widespread Cost of Natural Resource Exploitation

by Andi Batara June 30, 2025
blue refugee tent Lumbung Sosial: Challenges and Opportunities of Indonesia’s Social Barn Program
  • Exclusive
  • Featured
  • Soft News

Lumbung Sosial: Challenges and Opportunities of Indonesia’s Social Barn Program

by Kesya Arla June 27, 2025

About Us

  • GNA CEO’s Letter
  • GNA In-House Team
  • GNA Author Network
  • GNA Press Release Guidelines
  • GNA Op-ed Article Guidelines
  • GNA Community Content Guidelines
  • GNA Internship
  • Contact Us
  • Terms of Service
  • Privacy Policy
© 2021-2025 Green Network Asia