Press Release
Audi, BP, easyJet and Microsoft slammed for greenwashing in international Bad Company Awards 2009
07 Dec 2009
- Global brands exposed for playing up low-carbon
credentials
- Awards highlight dubious corporate green claims as
climate talks get underway in Copenhagen
The consumer right to true and trusted information about the
environmental impact of products and services has dominated the Bad
Company Awards 2009.
Organised by the global consumer watchdog Consumers
International (CI), this year's awards have looked exclusively at
the practice of corporate greenwashing to highlight the tendency of
companies to play up the green credentials of their products.
The Awards' focus on greenwashing is important as the global
community gathers in Copenhagen to discuss preventing runaway
climate change. Greenwashing erodes consumer trust in businesses
and undermines genuine moves towards greener lifestyles. This
creates a situation in which we all lose.
This year's Bad Company Award 'winners' are:
Audi - For suggesting, with a glossy
advertising campaign, that its new diesel A3 is clean and does not
harm the environment. And inferring that driving the car is as
green as riding a bicycle.
BP - For claiming to be
concerned about emissions and speaking frequently about its
'alternative energy' division while dropping its investment in
renewable energy, and pulling out of numerous renewable
projects.
easyJet - For continuing to claim that
travelling on an easyJet plane is better for the environment than
driving a hybrid car.
Microsoft - For claiming its new software
Windows 7 is green because it has some energy saving additions,
whilst encouraging consumers to purchase a new computer to run the
software.
And a special award also goes to the oil industry-backed
Co2 is Green for its attempts to rebrand carbon
emissions as good for the environment.
Luke Upchurch, of Consumers International,
said:
"The impact of consumer behaviour on the environment is a
crucial issue. With global climate negotiations underway in
Copenhagen we want these awards to bring attention to the need for
straight up facts about the green credentials of the products and
services we buy.
"This year's Bad Company Awards show that even some of the
world's biggest brands indulge in greenwashing. We're calling for
an end to dubious green claims and overplayed environmental
credentials so that consumers can make informed, rational
purchasing choices. "