Following the UK Competition and Markets Authority's ("CMA") recent investigation regarding 'Green Claims' in the fashion industry (discussed here), the CMA has now published a Compliance Guide to help fashion businesses "stay on the right side of consumer law". This is part of the CMA's "essential" work to ensure consumers can make informed choices based on environmental claims that they can trust.
In short, all of your environmental claims must be clear and accurate. The Compliance Guide is full of concrete examples of green claims in the fashion industry, which are not compliant with consumer law and explanations of how they can be made compliant. It seems to be deliberately drafted to be accessible and broad in application (a similar approach has been adopted in the CMA's guidance on green collaborations between competitors: CMA Guidance on Environmental Agreements | Insights | Mayer Brown).
Firms at all levels of the supply chain should take note
The CMA emphasises that each business in the fashion supply chain has a responsibility to ensure that its claims are accurate and substantiated. While the focus of the Compliance Guide is on fashion retail (including sales of a retailers own or third-party products via a marketplaces), the CMA notes that it will also be relevant to manufacturers and suppliers (including third party branded suppliers) and wholesalers and distributors (referring to paragraphs 2.20 and 2.21 of the Code).
What is a Green Claim?
These are claims that show how a product, service, brand, or business provides a benefit, or is less harmful to the environment.
Green Claims are used by many businesses to market their products or services – this is an area of growing importance for the increasingly eco-conscious consumer. This also ties in to the CMA priorities set out in its annual plan of working so that the whole UK economy can grow productively and sustainably, as well as people being confident they are getting great choices and fair deals.
CMA's Dos / Don'ts
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Don't .... |
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This new Compliance Guide is a clear signal that the CMA is willing to resort to stronger intervention in this space going forward, bolstered particularly by direct consumer enforcement powers and possibility of severe financial penalties following the introduction of the Digital Markets, Competition and Consumers Act 2024 ("DMCC"), with relevant provisions set to come into force around the end of Q1 2025. For further information regarding the DMCC, further reading is here.
Originally published by Eye on ESG
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