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Green Building News

FTC Gets Tougher on Green Product Claims

The federal consumer protection bureau promises more action against companies that make deceptive environmental claims

联邦贸易委员会will be more aggressive about pursuing companies that make deceptive claims about the environmental benefits of their products.
Image Credit: Albert Herring/Wikimedia Commons

The director of the Federal Trade Commission’s consumer protection bureau promises that the agency will clamp down on companies that make misleading environmental claims about their products, according to anarticle inAd Week.

在纽约广告自制委员会年度大会之前的主题演讲中,杰西卡富裕概述了广告业的一些执法目标。其中包括对绿色产品的膨胀环境索赔镇压。

“A growing number of consumers are looking to buy green products and companies respond with green marketing,”Ad Weekquoted Rich as saying. “But sometimes what companies think green claims mean and what consumers think they mean are two different things.”

The FTC released its updated“green guides”a year ago. They are an attempt to educate advertisers on how to avoid making deceptive claims about their products. Until last year, the guides hadn’t been updated since 1998.

FTC studies advertising on many products

The FTC is already looking at a variety of industries as it seeks to make marketing claims truthful.

The agency said in August that it had sued three companies over claims that their mattresses were free of volatile organic compounds and other toxic substances,Green Building Law Updatereported.

In March, theFTC announced这两个油漆制造商同意停止声称他们的油漆是无呼吸的。

In her address in New York, Rich said the commission had signed consent agreements with five replacement window marketers over “unsupported energy efficiency and money-savings claims…”

Window marketers had claimed consumers could cut their energy bills in half, but Rich said the settlements required marketers to prove it.

“Among other things, the settlements require the marketers to substantiate energy savings claims that include the words ‘up to.’” she said. “For example, if they claim consumers will save ‘up to’ a certain amount of money or achieve energy savings ‘up to’ a certain amount, they must have competent and reliable scientific evidence to substantiate that all or almost all consumers are likely to achieve the maximum claimed savings.”

The full text of Jessica Rich’s remarks is availableon the Web.

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