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Cutting Through Confusion:
How Green Seal Simplifies Sustainable Shopping

We spoke with CEO Doug Gatlin to learn how Green Seal developed a certification mark that simplifies consumer decision-making and sets a foundation for the industry to advance toward a healthier product future.

Consumers want to understand what is in the products they are buying. The 400+ ecolabels currently on the market can help; but sometimes they leave the consumer more confused about a product’s sustainability claims, as there is no common standard.

Global nonprofit Green Seal aims to reduce that confusion by offering a clear, trusted standard for sustainable products across industries. Through extensive research, Green Seal found that while consumers want products that are safe, non-toxic, cruelty-free, and evaluated for health and environmental impacts, they struggle to understand the meaning behind many certifications. To bridge that gap, Green Seal collaborated with leading consumer-packaged goods brands, retailers and consumers to design a refreshed certification mark that is both recognizable and trusted.

With a plan to unveil the new certification mark at SB’24 San Diego later this month, Green Seal aims to build trust, simplify purchasing decisions, and ultimately guide the industry toward more meaningful environmental and social impacts by focusing on clear communication and industry-wide standards.

We spoke with CEO Doug Gatlin to understand how Green Seal developed a certification mark that simplifies decision-making for consumers and sets a foundation for the industry to advance toward a healthier product future.

How do you envision this new certification mark reshaping the market for sustainable products and helping brands build trust with increasingly skeptical consumers?

Solving the Biggest Problem with Sustainable Products

What are your criteria for a sustainable product? Lack of consistent standards around this continues to confound consumers. Join us as Green Seal CEO Doug Gatlin unveils the latest evolution of the nonprofit's certification mark; shares insights on engaging customers with clear, consistent messaging and more – Wednesday, Oct. 16, at SB'24 San Diego.

Doug Gatlin: We spent the past two years talking with consumer-packaged goods brands, retailers and consumers; and one thing that became apparent was that everyone is looking for a way to cut through the chaos in the marketplace.

Through national surveys, consumers told us they most want their products to be non-toxic, safe for daily use, comprehensively screened for health and environmental effects, and cruelty-free. They said they look to the product label to figure out if a product matches their values, and that certifications can help — but only if they understand what the certification means, which they often don’t.

We worked with the top brand consultancy in the business to develop a brand identity and certification mark that will move the needle with consumers. We explored a few different concepts and arrived at the one that tested far and away the best: Our bold G checkmark logo with the descriptor, “Meets a high standard for protecting people and planet.” The results showed 78 percent of consumers are more likely or much more likely to buy a product if they see that logo and descriptor combination on it.

That said, we know a certification mark alone won’t solve the challenges in the marketplace. Our new brand identity is just the first step in our commitment to take bold action to align the consumer-packaged goods and retail communities on the core elements of safer and more sustainable products.

What inspired Green Seal to take on the challenge of creating a standardized definition for safer products, and what gaps did you identify in the current market?

DG: We took a hard look at how to accomplish our mission to accelerate the adoption of safer and more sustainable products, and realized nobody agrees what those products are. From retailers to regulators to ecolabels, we all have a different standard. This is an unpopular position for the CEO of an ecolabeling organization, but — at this point, ecolabels are just adding to the confusion. There are so many labels that define sustainability differently that it’s hard for consumers to know who to trust.

This is one reason why there is such a big gap between the number of US shoppers who say they want to be seen as buying and using eco-friendly products (43 percent) and the number who actually do. The other reason is that consumers are overwhelmed by all the issues they know they should care about — whether it’s chemical safety or packaging waste or carbon emissions — and they have no consistent source of information for evaluating any of this.

I know from 12 years of experience working on the very successful LEED green building program that until we develop a common definition of sustainability that everyone — including industry practitioners and consumers — can get behind, we’re not going to move forward in a meaningful way.

Can you walk us through the five core elements of a green product — Safer Chemicals, Responsible Sourcing, Low-Impact Manufacturing, Sustainable Packaging, and Verified Performance and Claims — and explain how Green Seal evaluates each element?

DG: If we’re going to bring the industry together around a definition of a safer and more sustainable product, it has to be a collaborative project — it can’t be an edict from up high. We developed the Core Elements framework with the help of a community of more than 100 industry practitioners from more than 75 companies. This is very much the beginning of the journey — we are just now opening a call for volunteer experts to join our committees to help us define the next generation of leadership for cleaning products, personal-care products and building-restoration products using this framework.

  • We expect to define Safer Chemicals as those that have undergone a hazard assessment. This means that chemicals can’t slip in simply because they do not appear on a known hazard list; they must proactively undergo an assessment to prove they will not do harm to people or the planet if they are used in the product.

  • For Responsible Sourcing, we think the manufacturer should adhere to established third-party frameworks for resource sustainability, comply with widely accepted fair-labor practices, and meet cruelty-free standards. Many brands already comply with certifications in these areas. The last thing the industry needs is for us to create new criteria in areas where other organizations already are doing great work. We expect to reference existing programs wherever possible, for the sake of harmonization and ease of compliance for manufacturers.

  • For Low-Impact Manufacturing, we think producers should use strong quality- and environmental-management systems by meeting the intent of the ISO 9001 and ISO 14001 standards set by the International Organization for Standardization.

  • As for Sustainable Packaging, we think a product’s primary packaging should contain recycled or biobased content and meet or exceed industry guidelines for recyclability and reuse.

  • For Verified Performance and Claims, products should be able to prove they work for their intended function compared to nationally recognized products, using commonly accepted test methods. And their marketing claims should be qualified and substantiated.

This is our starting point for the core elements, and we are looking forward to a healthy conversation with industry practitioners about product-category-specific criteria that is ambitious but attainable.

How has the refreshed framework evolved from the original?

DG: Our certification standard has always covered the entire lifecycle of a product — from raw materials selection through manufacturing, packaging, use and disposal. Two things are different about this new framework: It is crystal clear and it is designed for industry-wide adoption.

The Core Elements framework lays out the five non-negotiables a product must meet to claim a safer designation. This transforms complex technical criteria into a language that is easy for brands to communicate and consumers to comprehend. Until we speak a common language, we will not progress any further on product sustainability.

This framework also is meant to be a public resource. We recognize that certification is only one tool to accomplish our mission. We want brands and retailers to use this framework even outside of their work with us.

What other benefits will the Green Seal standard offer brands? Will it help with compliance with new legislation, such as the EU’s Ecodesign Regulation?

DG: Brands tell us one of the most valuable benefits they get from our certification is confidence. Both the science and regulation of ingredient safety and product sustainability are evolving quickly. Our standard ensures leadership in both these areas, and it is agile enough to quickly accommodate emerging issues. This means that when a new concern comes to the forefront for consumers and regulators — like it has recently with PFAS — Green Seal-certified products already are ahead of the curve.

Another major benefit is that brands can point to our publicly available criteria as substantiation for their leadership claims. What we’re hearing from our peer organizations in the EU is that their assurance process is no longer going to be seen as an aspirational voluntary target in the EU but will be reframed as a platform to support mandatory legal compliance with the new EU Green Claims Directive. Our laws in the US are not nearly so rigorous at this point; but with state regulations getting stricter, brands find that using a third-party certification to future-proof their products against impending regulations is a smart business move.

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