Dove Owner Unilever Faces U.K. Probe Into Environmental Claims About Household Products -- 2nd Update
12 Dezember 2023 - 12:53PM
Dow Jones News
By Saabira Chaudhuri and Michael Susin
The U.K.'s competition authority has launched a probe into
environmental claims made by Dove soap owner Unilever, marking the
start of what the regulator indicated could be a broader crackdown
on greenwashing by consumer products makers.
The U.K. Competition and Markets Authority said Tuesday that it
has started a formal investigation into the London-based company's
environmental claims about "a number" of its essential products
including household cleaners and toiletries.
The investigation comes after the CMA in January launched a
review of potentially misleading green claims made by
consumer-goods companies. On Tuesday, it said that effort had
"identified a range of concerns" and that new investigations into
other companies may follow.
The CMA said its concerns about Unilever include language that
is vague enough to mislead shoppers, ingredient claims that could
exaggerate how "natural" a product is and recyclability claims that
may not specify whether they refer to the product or packaging.
"The evidence we've seen has raised concerns about how Unilever
presents certain products as environmentally friendly," said CMA
Chief Executive Sarah Cardell. "We'll be drilling down into these
claims to see if they measure up."
Unilever said it refuted that its claims are in any way
misleading and that it was surprised and disappointed by the CMA's
announcement. The company added that it plans to cooperate with the
investigation.
The regulator hasn't yet decided whether Unilever has broken any
consumer-protection laws and may still close the case without
further action. It said other outcomes include getting Unilever to
promise to change the way it operates and taking the company to
court.
The investigation is a blow to new Unilever Chief Executive Hein
Schumacher, who has made a point of shifting away from the
company's previous wide-ranging focus on sustainability. While
Unilever previously said all of its products needed to have an
environmental or social purpose, Schumacher has narrowed that focus
to certain key areas like climate and plastics.
The CMA, as part of its wider industry review, plans to analyze
environmental claims about consumer-goods products online and in
stores. It said it would focus on broad statements, including
claims about a product being "sustainable" or "better" for the
environment with no evidence, and about the use of recycled or
natural materials in a product and how recyclable it is.
Regulators in the U.S. have also been working to better protect
consumers from misleading recyclability claims and other claims
they say are too vague. The Federal Trade Commission is in the
process of updating its Green Guides, which serve as guardrails for
companies making green marketing claims.
Write to Saabira Chaudhuri at saabira.chaudhuri@wsj.com and
Michael Susin at michael.susin@wsj.com
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
December 12, 2023 06:38 ET (11:38 GMT)
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