18 tips to make your company look green (even though it’s not).
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This is based on the Corporate Climate Responsibility Monitor 2022, which has assessed the climate strategies of 25 major global companies.
newclimate.org/2022/02/07/cor…
The study has identified 18 "bad practices" through which companies make themselves look greener than they actually are. Here are all of them.
#1 Exclude most of your emissions from the calculus of your footprint.
#2 Set a very high target base year to make it look like you’re doing so much better now.
#3 Exclude as much emissions as possible, like the ones from land use change.
#4 Easier than cutting emissions in reality, just cut them from your Excel spreadsheets.
#5 Shift your emissions to subsidiaries. Their problem, not yours.
#6 Get certified (especially by someone who will certify you without asking too many questions).
#7 Set targets so that it looks like you’re reducing emissions (even though you’re not).
#8 Again, the golden rule is: exclude, exclude, exclude.
#9 Hide behind a ‘net-zero’ target that doesn’t involve actually reducing your emissions.
#10 Never use the word “reduction.”
#11 Collect Renewable Energy Certificates like Pokemon cards. It’s easier than actually reducing your emissions.
#12 Change something small, and double-count it so it looks HUGE.
#13 Ignore renewable electricity.
#14 Say you’re “offsetting.”
#15 When audited, always showcase your greenest product or brand.
#16 Don’t say for how long you’re offsetting. You’re offsetting, that’s all.
#17 You’re offsetting, that’s all, I said. It doesn’t matter, how, where, why, and whether it actually reduces emissions.
#18 Make everything look like a climate contribution.
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