"Greenwashing"when companies make false or misleading sustainability claims about their products or servicesis a big problem in New Zealand, and one young woman is trying to change that.
Antonia Estall is the new leader of the Asia-Pacific chapter of Creatives for Climate, a non-profit global network dedicated to climate action, Adweek reports.
According to Consumer NZ, Estall's main focus will be on New Zealand, where nine in 10 people check a product's sustainability claims before buying it.
"The reality of the New Zealand market is it's very easy for a company to make a false or misleading sustainability claim about a product or service and go unchecked because greenwashing is essentially unmonitored," Consumer NZ's head of research and advocacy says.
"Shoppers can find it hard to differentiate between what is legitimately sustainable versus what is greenwashing, so the creative industry plays a crucial role in holding the line when it comes to genuine sustainable communication," an advertising and brand creativity professor at the University of Auckland tells Adweek.
"Any efforts to empower more truthful advertising and marketing are very welcome."
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