# The Greenwashing Guide Read first How to spot greenwashing in three seconds. Most "eco-friendly" labels at major retailers don't mean anything specific. Here is a four-step heuristic you can apply at the shelf, online, or anywhere a brand is asking you to trust them. The four-second test Look for a number. "70% recycled content" beats "made with recycled materials." A number can be checked. An adjective can't. Look for a third-party name. "USDA Organic," "GOTS," "BPI Certified Compostable" — these are external standards with public criteria. "Eco-Verified" with a leaf icon a brand designed itself is not. Look for end-of-life specificity. "Compostable in commercial facilities" is honest. "Biodegradable" alone is usually not, because most products end up in landfills where biodegradation is slow and produces methane. Look for what's missing. A genuine sustainability story names trade-offs ("ships from overseas, but lasts five times longer than the alternative"). Pure marketing copy never names a downside. The seven words that should make you suspicious None of these are illegal — most aren't even regulated. But each is so soft that a brand can use them without committing to anything verifiable. Eco-friendly FTC has flagged this as one of the most-abused environmental claims. Means whatever the marketer wants it to mean. Natural Tobacco is natural. Mercury is natural. The word implies safety and purity it doesn't carry. Green An aesthetic, not a property. Green packaging is not the same as a green product. Sustainable Without a number behind it ("net-zero by 2030," "100% renewable energy"), it's an aspiration. Plant-based Vague — petroleum-derived plastics can technically be made from plant feedstocks. Look for what percentage and from what plant. Clean Especially common in personal care. There is no agreed definition of "clean beauty" and the term is essentially marketing. Conscious Used by H&M's "Conscious Collection," which has been the subject of multiple regulatory complaints. The word implies something the underlying product often doesn't deliver. What to ask Before you buy, run a product through these five questions: What specifically is sustainable about it? Material, packaging, lifecycle, energy, labor — pick one. Who verified that claim? An external standard, an internal "sustainability team," or no one? What's it made of, by mass or volume? If you can't find out, that's information. What happens to it when you're done? Curbside, commercial compost, landfill, take-back, or something else? Where is it made and shipped from? An "eco-friendly" product flown across the world has costs that may dwarf the material benefits. How Poplar&Main handles this Read our Standards to see the exact criteria a product has to clear before it goes on the shelf. Short version: every product anchors at least one Tier 1 certification or two Tier 2 verifiable attributes, and the supplier is named on every page. FAQ {faqs.map(f => ( {f.q} {f.a} ))} Further reading FTC Green Guides — the US federal guidance on environmental marketing claims EU Green Claims Directive (proposed) — Europe's incoming requirement that environmental claims be substantiated and verified Certifications, Explained — our working glossary of the certifications we accept --- Source: https://poplarandmain.com/pages/the-greenwashing-guide Markdown view: https://poplarandmain.com/pages/the-greenwashing-guide?view=md