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The typical image of the Mediterranean is a blue sea with white-walled houses clinging to the rocky landscape. Every spring, after the Easter processions when the Mistral stops blowing, house-proud citizens freshen up those walls with a bucket of whitewash. The power of a simple mixture of lime, chalk and water to hide the ravages of a year's wear and tear is so compelling it has entered the language. When a politician puts the best face on a difficult policy, we accuse them of 'whitewashing' the truth. The language lives and whitewash has now acquired a green tinge as companies appeal to environmentally careful consumers. Some of them claim green credentials where no green credentials exist. Culprits range from “green phones†through “eco-credit cards†to “clean, green nuclear powerâ€. The Australian Consumer and Competition Commission has had to step in and regulate the offset of carbon dioxide emissions and provide guidelines and definitions for the term “climate neutralâ€. Your challenge is to develop the necessary X-ray vision to see past the greenwash to the facts underneath. A mixture of specific examples and general principles are provided here to hone your green wash detectors. |
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| `We support the election process, we support democracy, but that doesn't mean we have to support governments that get elected as a result of democracy.' GWBush - Washington, D.C., Mar. 29, 2006 |