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Greenwashing happens when packaging claims sound or look sustainable but lack clear, verifiable evidence or ignore local disposal realities. Look for vague terms like “eco-friendly,” missing material disclosures, unsupported certifications, and claims that don’t align with South Africa’s recycling, composting, or waste infrastructure. Before you accept any claim, confirm with a local recycler, composter or EPR if the material is collected and processed at scale around the country.
Ever picked up a packaging item that promises it’s “green”, “made from plants” or “eco-friendly” and wondered how sustainable it actually is? You’re not alone. Across South Africa, consumers are seeing bold sustainability claims but most of the time, the fine print is missing.
Terms like biodegradable, compostable, eco-friendly, green, recyclable, renewable, and plant-based are everywhere. What matters is how the packaging performs in real disposal conditions in South Africa.
This guide will help you:
• Understand what greenwashing in packaging is
• Spot the most common red flags
• Verify claims practically
• Protect your brand from misleading marketing
Greenwashing is when a product, brand, or advertiser creates the impression of sustainability without verifiable evidence or without relevant local context.
It often shows up as:
• Vague, emotional language: words like eco-friendly, green, planet-safe without specifics
• Technically true, but practically misleading claims: packaging may be biodegradable somewhere, just not where your customers are
• Missing local context: ignores local recycling, composting or waste infrastructure and whether it is at scale
• Visual cues that imply environmental benefits without proof: “green” icons, earthy colours, leaves
Even if a claim isn’t false, leaving out context can mislead consumers unintentionally. The above are what regulatory bodies across the globe are warning you against.
Even if technically true, misleading sustainability claims carry reputational and regulatory risk:
• Consumer Protection Act (CPA): False or misleading claims about environmental benefits are prohibited. To use vague words like eco-friendly, you must clearly explain what the environmental benefits are.
• SANS 1728: Provides guidance for clear and verifiable packaging claims in South Africa.
• Global trends: EU Packaging & Packaging Waste Regulation (EU PPWR), Single-Use Plastics Directive, and other regulations set expectations for verifiable and traceable sustainability claims. For a practical breakdown, read how to navigate sustainable packaging in South Africa, inspired by European lessons.
Packaging decisions involve material science, waste systems, consumer behaviour, and economics. Marketing often compresses all this complexity into single words or symbols, which can be misleading.
For example, packaging may be:
• Recyclable but rarely recycled locally
• Compostable but hardly composted locally
• Biodegradable but almost never degraded, and contaminating recycling streams locally
• Renewable yet resource-intensive to produce
• Plant-based but not produced with renewable energy
Materials can perform differently in real disposal systems than in controlled conditions. Without proper context, it’s hard for buyers and consumers to assess environmental performance.
Be cautious of emotionally appealing phrases similar to:
• Eco-friendly
• Green
• Environmentally responsible
• Planet-safe
These describe sentiment, not measurable outcomes.
Ask: What is this packaging actually made of? Are the instructions clear and usable?
Credible suppliers should be able to clearly share:
• Exact material composition
• Coatings, laminations, or linings
• Multi-material structures
• Additives or treatments
If you don’t know the makeup, you can’t assess performance.
Even technically accurate claims can mislead if the required systems don’t exist locally at scale. Ask:
• Does it need special conditions such as an industrial composter?
• Which stream does it belong to (recycling, compost, or general waste)?
• Is that system available where I live, and for my customers?
• Does South Africa support this at scale? Are these systems common locally, or limited to small pilots?
• Is there credible certification?
• What happens if I dispose of it like normal waste?
• Will it contaminate recycling?
• How long does it take to break down?
• What is left after breakdown?
Disposal infrastructure varies by region. Packaging marketed as recyclable, compostable or biodegradable may deliver limited benefit if:
• Facilities are scarce, resulting in low recycling or composting
• Collection is inconsistent
• Sorting is inaccurate
• Contamination risks are high
Icons, badges, or colours like these can mislead you:
• Recycling loops
• Leaf or nature imagery
• “Green” badges
• Earth-tone colors
Visual cues don’t equal proof. Always verify:
• Certification bodies
• Scope of approval
• Required processing conditions
• Local waste facilities and whether they can process this at scale
Responsible claims should be able to explain:
• Material composition
• Certification and issuing body
• End-of-life pathways available from collection to processing’
• Processing conditions/requirements
• Local feasibility (at scale or in progress)
If explanations rely on marketing terms alone, proceed with caution.
Even recyclable or compostable materials could be useless if there’s no or limited local systems to process them. Environmental performance depends on:
• Collection pathways
• Sorting techniques
• Market demand
• Processing facilities
• Consumer behaviour
A recyclable material without collection behaves like waste. A compostable material without the required conditions to compost also behaves like waste. A biodegradable material without correct sorting and required conditions creates contamination and waste.
This is why verifying the local processing infrastructure, and whether it is at scale in South Africa is the most critical step.
Practical verification steps:
• Contact waste management providers, EPRs (such as Fibre Circle and PolyCo), recycling organizations, or industrial composting facilities
• Confirm if the material is collected and processed at scale
• Ask about timelines, conditions, limitations, and trade-offs
This ensures your sustainability claims are real, not just theoretical.
When evaluating suppliers:
• Request full material disclosure from suppliers
• Ask for credible third-party certification evidence
• Understand end-of-life pathways
• Verify local compatibility at scale yourself
• Avoid relying on marketing terms, and begin questioning them
An evidence-driven approach protects your brand and ensures sustainability actually delivers value.
Not necessarily. Many claims are technically true but misleading due to omitted context or unrealistic disposal assumptions.
Contact local recycling, composting, and waste management facilities to confirm whether the packaging is processed at scale in South Africa. Ask suppliers for full material and certification details for clarity.
Only if collection, sorting, and processing systems support the material composition locally.
No. Certifications validate material behaviour under defined conditions, not real-world disposal outcomes locally, and so do not guarantee local processing. Always verify local infrastructure and feasibility yourself.
Yes. These terms alone are marketing language. Claims should be supported by verifiable, locally relevant evidence.
Misleading claims can damage reputation, erode consumer trust, and trigger regulatory scrutiny.
Yucca Packaging
Address: Unit 1, Reserve 5, Capricorn Way, Brackenfell, Cape Town, 7560
Contact number: +27 21 949 2296
Contact form: https://yucca.co.za/contact
