In the world of corporate sustainability, words matter. More and more companies are choosing to communicate their environmental commitment to attract consumers and investors. However, when these promises are not backed by concrete actions, they risk engaging in so-called greenwashing - the practice of presenting themselves as sustainable without actually being so. This often leads to an overstatement of positive impacts and - at the same time – an understatement or complete omission of negative ones, as seen in cases of greenhushing.
This dynamic is not merely a reputational issue. Today, greenwashing represents a real legal and competitive risk, with severe consequences for misleading communication. The European Union has initiated a crackdown through new directives and regulations, while national authorities have already sanctioned several high-profile cases.
The term greenwashing is a blend of "green" and "whitewashing", referring to the strategic use of environmental messaging that is unverified, vague, or misleading.
The new European regulatory framework – particularly Directive 2024/825/EU – defines a green claim as: “Any message, text-based or visual, that states or suggests a positive, neutral, or improved impact on the environment.”
Greenwashing differs from greenhushing, the opposite trend where companies avoid communicating their ESG progress for fear of being accused of greenwashing.
A recent and concrete example of greenwashing is the GLS case, where the Italian Competition Authority (AGCM) imposed an €8 million fine.
Key violations included:
The GLS case illustrates how weak ESG data governance can expose even active companies to sanction risks, especially when transparency and traceability are lacking.
Companies must now navigate a dense regulatory environment, including:
The new rules prohibit:
Today, companies are judged not only by what they do, but also by how they talk about it. In a market where trust is everything, clear and honest communication is crucial to avoid accusations, sanctions, and reputational crises.
Greenwashing is the opposite of sustainability. And sustainability, to be real, must be grounded in truth, verification, and value.