It hasn’t been the ‘hot vax summer’ that we were promised. Instead, it’s been a
summer where the impact of the climate emergency showed there’s no time to
waste. Floods in Germany, raging forest fires in Greece, soaring
temperatures and wildfires heating up the Western US and record wet bulb
temperatures in
Pakistan
are stark, real-time reminders of the devastating impact of climate change that
show us what the ‘new normal’ will really look like. And with people connecting
more with
nature
during the pandemic and embracing the experience of their local area, it’s not
surprising that 86 percent of people want to see a more sustainable word
post-pandemic,
according to the World Economic
Forum.
But with the impacts of climate change rapidly escalating, brands need to both
be leaders in climate
action and
empower people to make positive choices. This era of
"solastalgia" (anxiety created by the climate crisis) calls for a more
deliberate approach. As climate scientist and writer Kate Marvel wrote back
in
2018:
“We need courage, not hope. Grief, after all, is the cost of being alive. We are
all fated to live lives shot through with sadness and are not worth less for it.
Courage is the resolve to do well without the assurance of a happy ending.”
As eco-anxiety and climate
grief
grow, people are looking for support in how to continue. So how can brands
create courage among their audiences? And during an age of climate grief and
growing sense of doom, businesses need to move beyond empty promises and deliver
a meaningful strategy for change.
A key challenge for encouraging sustainable behaviours is how businesses can
bridge the intention-action
gap.
We understand that there is a general cultural willingness towards pro
environmental action – a PEW survey from
2020
found that 64 percent of all Americans feel that protecting the environment
should be a top priority for governments. While small pockets of climate change
deniers exist, that the Earth is getting hotter is no longer a contentious
cultural issue. Unfortunately, however, consensus on the changing climate
doesn’t equate with mass adoption of eco-friendly behaviours. Barriers such as
price, availability and
convenience
often stop people from creating more sustainable habits.
To encourage action, you need to build trust. This is especially important as
recent
research
has found that 73 percent of Gen Z would be willing to pay more for
sustainable products. But greater investment means brands need to be credible
when it comes to doing what they say they’re committing to, in order to earn
that value. People feel misled over sustainability, so establishing trust with
audiences
is important. Keeping it simple and prioritising transparency is key. For
example, Positive Luxury’s Butterfly
Mark
certification has been created to act as a legitimate marker of sustainable
practices, partnering with brands to endorse their production methods. We’ve
seen how effective something as simple as labelling can be in helping people cut
through the noise. In a study of 23,000 vegans, 91 percent
said
they relied on a ‘V stamp’ that independently verifies vegan produce to inform
their purchasing decisions. There’s a similar opportunity for sustainability.
Approaching transparency from a different route, Allure magazine has made a
stand against greenwashing by committing to not using false eco-jargon in the
magazine. It has rejected the use of terms such as recyclable, green,
compostable and biodegradable as crutches for avoiding meaningful action.
The editors
explained:
“We need to do much more to understand and address the realities of the beauty
waste problem — and a good place to start is with the way we talk about it.”
In fact, as we grapple with the new paradigms of the climate emergency, there’s
a need for new words to name and give significance to the challenges people are
facing. Scientist Bruce Erickson coined the term ‘endling,’ for example, to
denote an animal that was the last of its species. Talking about the
significance of naming, Erickson explained
that:
“We don’t name the things we choose to ignore. … Somehow, naming it gives it a
value that wasn’t there before.” As people try to process climate grief, the
words we do use to talk about the climate are equally as important as those we
reject.
We know from the pandemic that in times of global crisis, people rely on
businesses. Research from March last year found that 78 percent of people felt
brands should
help them
in their daily lives during the pandemic. Stakes are high around false promises
by businesses, and greenwashing can derail confidence-building in terms of
environmental action, breaking down positive intentions and leaving people
feeling frustrated, unempowered and confused. Businesses that take the time to
research their processes, and get into the detail of what those processes are,
also win trust. For example, the body wash brand Plus
talks through its "Less Waste, More
Magic" approach in a step-by-step
guide on its website, taking readers through everything from its dissolvable
packaging, to composting and shipping. Not only is it transparent, but the
approach shows how the brand has been created with a view to making eco
behaviours as easy as possible for people to enact.
The environment doesn’t exist in a vacuum, though. For businesses to truly
empower and play a meaningful role in change, they also need to pursue
environmental action from an intersectional standpoint. Race and
poverty
directly correlate with exposure to toxic air and polluted water; and as the
world warms, research
shows that
those in the Global South will be disproportionately impacted by heating of 1.5-2°C. So, a meaningful strategy needs to take a multi-faceted approach to
combating the climate crisis that acknowledges and addresses the inherent
inequalities
in the climate emergency. Brands such as Girlfriend
Collective are leading the way here: The
brand makes activewear products out of recycled fishing nets and
cupro, and demonstrates its
attention to intersectionality by donating part of its proceeds to organizations
that support Black Lives
Matter. And
Patagonia’s Footprint Chronicles
maps the impact on both the environment and local communities for each piece the
company makes.
“As we see more and more brands emerging that are really driven by activism,
with true purpose and cause behind them, it’s really important for people to
feel as though they’re part of something,” says Heather
Crawford,
VP of marketing and e-commerce at sustainable packaging service
Loop.
To foster courage in the face of crisis then, empowerment through transparency,
trust through intersectional action and a constant determination to iterate and
improve can give hope and empowerment in a troubling age.
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India Doyle is Deputy Editor at London-based consumer insights agency Canvas8.
Published Aug 30, 2021 8am EDT / 5am PDT / 1pm BST / 2pm CEST