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Greenwashing rules to be scaled back, but scope of change remains unclear

Last updated: November 12, 2025 8:35 am
Published: 5 months ago
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TORONTO – Canada’s greenwashing rules are being scaled back, but it remains to be seen what the changes mean for businesses wanting to talk about their environmental record.

In the federal budget released last week, the government said it plans to remove parts of the greenwashing laws, passed in June last year, that are part of the Competition Act.

“These “greenwashing” provisions are creating investment uncertainty and having the opposite of the desired effect with some parties slowing or reversing efforts to protect the environment,” the government said in the budget.

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Specifically, the government says it plans to remove the rule that business environmental claims have to be backed up by internationally recognized methodology, as well as removing the option for third parties such as environmental groups to be able to challenge claims.

There’s been criticism that the wording around the methodology standard is too vague. While the Competition Bureau has given guidelines, they’re not enforceable and still undefined in Canadian law.

In an analysis of the budget’s proposed changes, law firm Gowling WLG says it doesn’t seem the government plans to remove the rules requiring that a product’s “green” benefits be backed up by adequate testing, but does seem to lower the bar for evidence backing up those claims.

McMillan LLP says in a bulletin that the rules will still prevent businesses from making misleading or false environmental claims, but that it’s not yet clear what the scope of the proposed amendments may be.

Jennifer Quaid, a professor at the University of Ottawa’s Faculty of Law, said it’s not clear yet if the government plans to remove the entire rule about business claims, or just the part about the kind of evidence they need to back them up.

“It’s not clear to me whether the government is really going to scrap it, whether there’s going to be any overture or possibility to amend the language or clarify it.”

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Other countries have taken their own approaches on greenwashing laws, like Switzerland which requires green claims be based on “objective and verifiable criteria,” which Quaid said at least can be defined.

She said that while the law could be improved, the government shouldn’t back down on rules around greenwashing as they help to reward companies making real progress.

“If you want to encourage innovation in the sustainability space, you’ve got to make sure that those who actually invest get the rewards,” said Quaid.

“These kinds of claims are really being used to sell things,” she said.

“If you want to brag about it, and connect your business with positive outcomes, you need to have some basis to make that claim.”

Environmental groups have also criticized the pullback of the rules, while business groups have been supportive.

The Canadian Chamber of Commerce said it was encouraged by the government’s commitment to remove aspects of the greenwashing provisions to provide more certainty, while the Business Council of Alberta said it welcomed the review of greenwashing provisions.

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Many companies have removed disclosures since the law was passed, including the Pathways Alliance group of oilsands producers that wiped its social media and website the day it came into effect.

Other companies have been having to take a more methodical approach, combing through all their various disclosures and statements for anything that could trip an investigation.

A KPMG assessment found that there were one to two potential misrepresentations per page of sustainability disclosure, with close to a third being for overly broad language.

Conor Chell, national leader in ESG law at KPMG in Canada, said that even more than year after the law came into effect, companies still hadn’t fully adjusted to the law.

“When you actually look at the disclosures, the sustainability disclosures, we were still observing quite a noticeable gap between what those disclosures were and organization’s ability to actually back them up.”

While removing the provision around business claims might provide some more clarity, he wonders how much will actually change.

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“I’m not sure that those changes will actually have much impact in terms of the overall legal risk profile for organizations,” said Chell.

“Because greenwashing has always been illegal.”

Quaid noted that the new law did put the responsibility on the company making the claim to back it up, rather than require the Competition Bureau to prove it’s false, but it’s not clear if that requirement will survive the amending.

Chell said he will also be watching to see if the government removes the business claim clause altogether or just the methodology requirement, among other possible outcomes.

“The devil’s in the details and, the law, how it ultimately lands, is really what we’ll have to adhere to.”

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Nov. 11, 2025.

Read more on the federal budget at thestar.com

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