Today Iâm speaking on a panel at the PSFK conference about âGreenwashing.â For those of you who arenât familiar with this term â âGreenwashingâ is the act of trying to pass off unsustainable products as eco-friendly through branding, packaging or mislabeling. I love to see companies make an effort to go green, and so I inherently want to trust companies when they say their products are sustainable. But itâs becoming increasingly apparent, as the âgreen bubbleâ inflates, that you always need to read the fine print. While preparing my talk on greenwashing today, I had to search for examples and frankly, the bad apples werenât hard to find. The most entertaining example of greenwashing I found was this editorial piece in Businesweek about how âgreenâ the Swiffer is.
For those of you who arenât familiar with it, the Swiffer is a plastic contraption designed to replace the good old fashion mop. It is sold with a box of disposable, plastic-wrapped, chemical-soaked pieces of paper that go straight from your floor to landfill, where the chemicals leach into the ground. Yet the designer of the Swiffer, Gianfranco Zaccai, has recently published a piece in Businessweek magazine about how he is contributing to the greening of the planet with this device:
Cleaning the floor with an old-fashioned mop and detergent is a messy and unpleasant job that uses many gallons of hot water and great amounts of detergent every week in millions of homes around the world. The water, the energy needed to heat that water, and the environmental impact of dumping the detergent into the waste stream are terribly costly, and all for a job no one likes doing anyway.
The ironies of this article havenât gone unnoticed and a small debate has been raging over at Treehugger â is the Swiffer an example of sustainable design? Continuumâs President and CEO Gianfranco Zaccai assert that the Swiffer saves gallons of water every year, then calls on all of us to think about our grandchildren when designing for the future, to follow his example. We believe that the Swiffer story is an excellent example of greenwashing â making an unproven claim about a product or companyâs green benefit, when the product in fact has a negative environmental impact.
The Swiffer requires the continual purchase of toxic chemical sheets that wind up in landfill â hardly a sustainable design solution. Certainly, the Swiffer has created a financially sustainable model for P&G, and people claim to âloveâ their Swiffers. (Including our friends and family â weâve been getting into some pretty heated Swiffer debates at home). The success of the Swiffer has opened up an opportunity for true eco-innovation â Method Home has re-envisioned a floor-cleaning mop with non-toxic, compostable sweeping cloths. Which is more important â creating a design that people love, or one that does no harm?
Read more: GREENWASH YOUR FLOORS WITH THE SWIFFER | Inhabitat - Sustainable Design Innovation, Eco Architecture, Green Building