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14 sustainability clichés to retire in 2025

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31 Jul, 2025

This post was originally published on Green Biz

Source: Green Biz

Ready to disrupt an industry? You’ve already plucked the low-hanging fruit. It’s time to meet the moment. Drill down, run the numbers and think outside the box. But to truly move the needle, you’ll need to break down silos and align with other game changers.

If the above clichés read like nails on a chalkboard, you’re ahead of the curve (last one) when it comes to recognizing annoying business jargon. The sustainability profession is rife with lingo that lacks specificity, obscures accountability and alienates outsiders. Feel-good adjectives ring hollow. Acronyms distract those not in the know. Worse, the sloppy use of aspirational buzzwords could get you into legal trouble for greenwashing

Most of us are guilty at some point, if we’re being honest, and the first step to recovery is recognition. The second step? Memorizing the following glossary — and avoiding the worst offenders in sustainability-speak.

Carbon neutral by 20__ — This means little to a layperson — and less to any professional who knows the difference between principled near-term steps and “progress through offsets.”

Circular — The latest glib term for a complex idea is for too many people synonymous with “recyclable.” Which it’s not — and can’t be if the goal is to create and maintain truly waste-neutral ecosystems.

For a better tomorrow — Picture a sunrise in a fossil fuel ad. Now picture yourself using a less hackneyed phrase.

____________-friendly — Waving is friendly. But whether it’s “earth-,” “eco-” or “carbon-,” it will take much more than Midwestern manners to shift paradigms.

Green — Yes, it’s the color of leaves. But also most slime, some radioactive waste and the odd alien. Something vague enough to cover so much can’t be genuinely meaningful.

Nature-positive/climate-positive — Positive is good! (And too often unquantifiable — or a dodge.)

No net loss — Since when is less bad really a good thing?

Saving the planet — The Earth will be fine. What’s in trouble are humans.

Science-based — Sounds rigorous, but it’s pretty much meaningless unless it’s third-party validated.

Future-proof — Nobody knows what lies ahead, so what makes you think you can brace for it?

Greenwashing Obviously, excessive usage of this term is not as bad as the act itself but sometimes it sure feels that way.

Leverage — As a noun or verb, this stale chestnut is pretty much on every industry’s Jargon Bingo card. Let’s keep it off ours.

Recyclable — Technically, almost everything is recyclable. Practically, most everything won’t be unless systems exist that make it possible. See also biodegradable and compostable.

Regenerative — Appreciating how natural systems self-perpetuate does not overcome the fact that this term is ill-defined and barely validated.

The post 14 sustainability clichés to retire in 2025 appeared first on Trellis.

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Government consulting on sustainable investment labelling

Government consulting on sustainable investment labelling

The Australian Government is starting consultation on sustainable investment product labelling, which is designed to give investors more confidence to put more capital to work in sustainable products.

The federal government said the release of this paper is a key step in implementing its Sustainable Finance Roadmap — designed to help mobilise the capital required for Australia to become a renewable energy superpower, modernising the financial markets and maximising the economic opportunities from net zero.

This consultation paper seeks views from investors, companies and the broader community on a framework for sustainable investment product labels.

These labels are designed to help investors and consumers identify, compare and make informed decisions about sustainable investment products to understand what ‘sustainable’, ‘green’ or similar words mean when they’re applied to financial products.

The government said a more robust and clear product-labelling framework will help investors and consumers invest in sustainable products with confidence and help tackle greenwashing.

This phase of consultation will run from 18 July to 29 August and help the government refine its design principles for the framework.

The consultation paper is available on the Treasury consultation hub.

Image credit: iStock.com/wenich-mit

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