Can Young Lithuanian Consumers Drive Economic Transformation Through Sustainable Consumption?
Have you heard of “Greenwashing”? Explain your understanding of “greenwashing”?
no
Yes, when companies lie about the green effect
i might have heard of it but i can't explain.
I haven’t heard of greenwashing
I heard of that. Greenwashing is a process when company present themselve as sustainable business, but is not
No, I haven’t heard of it.
No
No
It might have some to do with transforming a product to be more sustainable
I think it means that a business creates an illusion that they are sustainable but in reality the steps they take do not make an impact.
i have not.
No
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i've heard about it, but i think it's a transition to a more sustainable way of living.
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No
i haven't heard this term.
I have not heard of greenwashing.
never heard of it
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no
Greenwashing for me is when brands come of more environmentally friendly than they actually are.
-
.
eco-friendly products
i heard that it's when people tell you stories about how they are creating products with recycled materials and not polluting the environment, but they are lying.
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good for the environment
Making a product reusable?
No
ne
no, i have not. it sounds like nature cleaning.
No i have not
I think its a term where businesses apply certain labels of sustainability or make it seem sustainable purely for marketing and branding purposes without actually making a real impact.
Yes, when you add too much green claims where they are not truth.
Greenwashing from what i understand is labeling something as ecological while it is not
Yes, greenwashing is basically pretending to be eco-friendly while hiding the actual non-environmental solutions under a “green” mask
No, I don’t know exactly, but I guess it’s something like green advertising manipulation.
Yes, I’ve seen examples where companies highlight small eco steps to hide bigger problems.
Yes, I know - it’s a strategy to improve image without real sustainability actions.
No, I haven’t heard of it before, but sounds like pretending to be ecological.
Yes, I’ve heard it used when big corporations exaggerate their environmental efforts.
Yes, I learned this term in marketing class it’s lying branding.
Yes, I know. It’s basically lying about being green
Yes, it’s about misleading people through false environmental marketing.
Yes, I’ve heard of it - fake sustainability claims used to attract consumers.
Yes, I know. It’s when companies claim to be eco-friendly but their actions don’t match their words.
Yes, it is when companies lie that their products are green or ecofriendly
No
Yes. Greenwashing is when companies pretend to care about the planet or social impact just to look good. They use “eco” language and visuals while still doing business in ways that drain resources and people’s spirit from the inside. It’s marketing dressed up as morality.
I haven't.
i havent heard of greenwashing, but its associates for me with brainwashing, so in my interpretation it could be somehow misleading marketing about sustainability
Yes, I can’t explain.
Yes, but not much. As I understand these are the companies that act like sustainable but actually its not.
Yes, I’ve heard about greenwashing. Greenwashing refers to businesses that pretend to be sustainable or eco-friendly.
Greenwashing is H&M where they use percentage “organic” cotton to produce their products, but the rest is polyester. Or some practices where it’s more damaging to the environment - for example electric cars may seem to be more sustainable and good for the environment, but the amount of water it takes to produce the car is more damaging to the environment
Yes. Greenwashing is when a company or organization uses misleading marketing to make itself appear more environmentally friendly than it actually is.
Never heard of it. I imagine it means making things ecological
Yes, greenwashing is when a campaign uses a lot of green elements in their packaging or other elements that make the product look sustainable, organic and healthy but most of the time that doesn't mean that it actually is
No I haven't.
Yes. It's when companies claim to be eco-friendly, while they're not. It's their 'money-making' strategy.