Votre site fait-il du greenwashing ?
La directive ECGT de l'UE interdit les allégations vertes génériques à partir du 27 septembre 2026. Amendes jusqu'à 4 % du chiffre d'affaires. Vérifiez votre conformité maintenant — gratuitement.
Comment ça marche
Entrez votre URL
Collez n'importe quelle URL de site web. Nous analyserons la page et extrairons tout le texte visible, les balises meta et les attributs alt des images.
Analyse par IA
Notre scanner vérifie les 28 termes interdits ou restreints par la directive ECGT, plus la détection IA ClimateBERT.
Obtenez votre score
Recevez un score de conformité (A-F), une analyse détaillée des allégations et des recommandations concrètes pour corriger les problèmes avant l'application.
Pourquoi vous en avez besoin
Directive ECGT 2024/825
La directive européenne visant à responsabiliser les consommateurs pour la transition verte interdit les allégations vertes génériques sans justification. L'application commence le 27 septembre 2026.
Amendes jusqu'à 4 %
La non-conformité peut entraîner des amendes allant jusqu'à 4 % du chiffre d'affaires annuel. Les États membres fixent leurs propres niveaux de sanctions.
28 termes interdits
Des termes comme « écologique », « neutre en carbone », « naturel » et « biodégradable » sont restreints sans preuve certifiée.
Fonctionnalités
Détection des termes ECGT
Correspondance de motifs contre les 28 termes verts interdits et restreints de la directive ECGT.
IA ClimateBERT
Détection des allégations environnementales par IA grâce au modèle ClimateBERT (86 % de précision).
Surveillance continue
Scans automatisés hebdomadaires ou quotidiens avec alertes e-mail lors de la détection de nouvelles allégations.
Badge de conformité
Intégrez un badge de conformité sur votre site pour montrer aux visiteurs que vos allégations vertes sont vérifiées.
REST API
Intégrez les vérifications de greenwashing dans votre pipeline CI/CD ou votre flux de conformité.
Rapports PDF
Téléchargez des rapports de conformité détaillés pour votre équipe juridique ou vos auditeurs.
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Septembre 2026 est plus proche que vous ne le pensez. Commencez à scanner dès aujourd'hui.
Vérifiez votre site gratuitementFrequently Asked Questions about Greenwashing Compliance
What is greenwashing and how is it defined under EU law?
Greenwashing is the practice of making misleading environmental claims about a product, service, or corporate activity to appear more sustainable than it actually is. Under EU law, two major directives address greenwashing. The Unfair Commercial Practices Directive (2005/29/EC) prohibits misleading environmental statements as a form of unfair commercial practice. The Green Claims Directive (proposed 2023, political agreement reached December 2024) requires traders to substantiate explicit environmental claims before making them, using scientifically based evidence, and have them independently verified by accredited third-party bodies. The Directive on Empowering Consumers for the Green Transition (EU 2024/825, adopted March 2024, transposition deadline March 2026) bans generic environmental claims (such as eco-friendly, green, natural, climate-neutral) without proof, prohibits claims about future environmental performance without clear commitments and third-party monitoring, and forbids presenting voluntary sustainability labels unless they are based on certification schemes or established by public authorities. Fines under these directives can reach 4 percent of annual turnover in Member States that have adopted the strongest enforcement (France, Germany, Netherlands). The French Anti-Waste Law (AGEC, 2020) explicitly prohibits claims like carbon neutral and 100 percent recyclable without proof.
What are examples of greenwashing that have been sanctioned?
Several high-profile cases illustrate enforcement action against greenwashing. Volkswagen Dieselgate (2015 to present): EU-wide fines exceeding 30 billion euros for software designed to falsify emissions tests, marketed as clean diesel. Ryanair (UK CAP authority, 2020): banned from claiming lowest emissions airline without proof, per ASA ruling. HSBC (UK, 2021): ASA banned climate ads for omitting information about bank's financed emissions. Lush Cosmetics (UK, 2022): ASA partially upheld complaints about naked packaging claims. Shell and BP (Netherlands, 2023): multiple ACM rulings banning vague green claims. H and M (Sweden, 2022): class action alleging false Conscious Collection claims. KLM (Netherlands, 2024): Amsterdam court ruled climate-neutral flying claims misleading. In France, DGCCRF sanctioned multiple retailers in 2024 for CO2 Neutral claims on e-commerce platforms (total 1.2 million euros in 2024). German DUH (Deutsche Umwelthilfe) won cases against Lidl (greenwashed plastic packaging, 2023), Aldi (meat product green labels, 2024), and C and A (climate-neutral t-shirt collection, 2023). Total greenwashing complaints to EU consumer protection authorities grew 187 percent from 2020 to 2024, with the highest increases in fashion, food, and financial services sectors.
What environmental claims are automatically banned by the new EU law?
Under the EU Directive on Empowering Consumers for the Green Transition (2024/825), effective in all Member States by September 2026, the following environmental claims will be prohibited: generic green claims without evidence (eco, green, sustainable, natural, climate-friendly, environmentally friendly), claims based solely on carbon offsetting (without showing actual emissions reductions), future sustainability claims (net zero by 2030) without clear commitments with monitoring by independent third parties and detailed implementation plans published, presenting voluntary sustainability labels unless based on an official EU certification scheme or established by public authorities (NGO self-made labels that are not verified), claims that only a small part of a product has an environmental advantage when the overall product doesn't (recycled packaging used to promote product impact), and duration-of-use claims without scientific basis. Claims permitted only with substantiation: specific numerical environmental claims (60 percent recycled content), comparative claims (40 percent less CO2 than previous generation), sector-specific claims. All substantiation must be verifiable, scientifically accurate, third-party validated where required, and publicly accessible. The Green Claims Directive (expected adoption 2025) will add pre-market verification requirements for all substantiated green claims.
How do I conduct a greenwashing audit of my marketing?
A systematic greenwashing audit covers all communication channels and claims. Step 1: Inventory all environmental claims across website, product labels, advertising, press releases, social media, ESG reports, packaging, B2B communications, and investor materials. Use automated crawlers (DeepCrawl, Screaming Frog) plus manual review. Step 2: Categorize claims by type: generic (eco-friendly), numeric (50 percent recycled), certification-based (B Corp), comparative (better than average), and forward-looking (net zero by 2030). Step 3: Evaluate substantiation for each claim. Documentation required: life cycle assessment (LCA) per ISO 14040 for product claims, GHG Protocol for carbon accounting, independent third-party verification (ISO 14021, ISO 14064). Map each claim to its supporting evidence. Step 4: Apply the Seven Sins of Greenwashing framework (TerraChoice 2009, still relevant): hidden trade-off, no proof, vagueness, irrelevance, lesser of two evils, fibbing, false labels. Step 5: Check against EU/national regulations: Unfair Commercial Practices Directive, Directive 2024/825, Green Claims Directive (once in force), AGEC law (France), BImSchG (Germany), national consumer protection authority guidance (ASA/CAP UK, ACM Netherlands, DGCCRF France, BVG Germany). Step 6: Risk scoring: low (clearly substantiated), medium (needs additional evidence), high (untenable without changes), critical (misleading). Step 7: Remediation plan with timelines. Typical audit cost: 5,000 to 50,000 euros for mid-size companies. Outputs: audit report, claims register, substantiation database, compliance training plan. Annual re-audit recommended.
What is a Carbon Footprint Verification and why is it required?
Carbon Footprint Verification is the independent assessment of an organization's or product's greenhouse gas emissions by an accredited third party. It is increasingly required for credible climate claims and compliance with emerging regulations. ISO 14064 standards govern verification: Part 1 for organizational inventories, Part 2 for project-level reductions, Part 3 for validation and verification. Verifiers must be accredited by national accreditation bodies (UKAS, ANAB, COFRAC, DAkkS). Product Carbon Footprint (PCF) follows ISO 14067 or the GHG Protocol Product Standard. Life Cycle Assessment (LCA) per ISO 14040/14044 provides the comprehensive basis. Verification scopes: Scope 1 (direct emissions), Scope 2 (purchased energy), Scope 3 (value chain, 15 categories). Scope 3 typically represents 70 to 95 percent of total footprint for most industries. Why verification is required: CSRD (Corporate Sustainability Reporting Directive, effective 2024 for listed companies 1000 plus employees, cascading down through 2029) requires assurance by accredited auditors; Science Based Targets initiative (SBTi) verification for emission reduction commitments; EU Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism (CBAM, phase 2 effective 2026) requires verification of embedded emissions in imports of steel, aluminum, cement, fertilizer, hydrogen, electricity; France Grenelle II article 225 (now largely superseded by CSRD) and Germany LkSG (Supply Chain Act, 2023). Verification cost: 15,000 to 75,000 euros for mid-size companies (SME threshold 250 employees, 50M euros turnover); 150,000 to 500,000 euros for large multinational enterprises. Timeline: 3 to 6 months typical. Benefits beyond compliance: credibility with stakeholders, inclusion in sustainability indices (Dow Jones, FTSE4Good), supplier qualifications, green finance eligibility, premium pricing for verified low-carbon products.