IAN ADAMSON - PLANET EARTH - where the Amazon rainforest is 10,000 acres smaller than it was yesterday.
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"Quality is never an accident. It is always the result of intelligent effort." - John Ruskin
Sunday, 3 April 2022
(EUR) EC TARGETS GREENWASHING AND PLANNED OBSOLESCENCE
New rules presented by the European Commission on Wednesday (30 March) aim to better protect consumers against false environmental claims and introduce a ban on greenwashing and planned obsolescence.The updated rules will ensure that European consumers are able to make informed decisions when shopping for environmentally-friendly products, the EU executive said in a statement announcing the initiative.
Consumers will also have a right to know how long a product is designed to last and how – if at all – it can be repaired, the Commission said.
“If we don’t change our behaviour, if we don’t consume less, if we don’t consume better, we won’t reach the objective set out in the Green Deal. It’s as simple as that,” said Didier Reynders, the EU’s justice commissioner.
But he added that it can be difficult for consumers to know how to contribute to tackling climate change, so they need to be better equipped to make sustainable choices and protected from misleading practices.
“We believe that consumers have a right to have the information they need to make sustainable choices,” he added, pointing to a recent study that found 86% of respondents wanted better information on how long a product would last and 82% found it difficult to find information on how long a product would last or whether it could be fixed.
To better inform consumers and protect them against unfair commercial practices, the Commission tabled an initiative on ‘Empowering the Consumer for the Green Transition’, which amends two existing directives: the unfair commercial practices directive (UCPD) and the consumer rights directive (CRD).
The amendment to the EU’s consumer rights directive would oblige traders to provide consumers with more detailed information on products’ durability and reparability.
For tech products like smartphones, consumers will have to be informed about software updates provided by the producer “in a clear and comprehensible manner” – either on the packaging or online.
A digital product passport will also be introduced for a wider range of products, with the ‘A to G’ rating set to become the norm in upcoming product-specific rules. euractiv - link - Frederic Simon - link - Kira Taylor - link - picture - link - more like this (greenwashing) - link - more like this (EU) - link
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