Yves Hemelryck

Prepare for the September 2026 EU Green Claims Directive. Learn the new requirements for scientific substantiation, verification, and how to avoid greenwashing.

The EU Green Claims Directive: What Companies Need to Know About Environmental Accountability in 2026

On May 29, 2024, the European Union adopted the Green Claims Directive—the world’s most comprehensive regulation on environmental claims. Starting September 27, 2026, this directive will reshape how companies communicate about their climate and environmental performance. Yet perhaps its most substantial contribution to the global fight against greenwashing lies beyond communication itself. By demanding scientific substantiation and independent verification, the directive creates a powerful catalytic effect on how organizations actually manage climate and environmental aspects within their internal processes and business models. Rigorous measurement, transparent reporting, and credible verification require companies to build genuine institutional capacity—embedding climate and nature-positive practices into operations, governance, and strategic planning. In this way, the directive becomes far more than a communication standard. It becomes a driver of authentic, long-term business transformation toward more responsible and resilient models of growth. Why Now? The Greenwashing Crisis For years, companies have made sweeping environmental claims with little to back them up. “Eco-friendly,” “sustainable,” “carbon neutral”—these terms became marketing tools rather than meaningful commitments. Consumers were misled. Investors couldn’t trust corporate climate disclosures. And organizations genuinely committed to environmental action found themselves competing on unequal terms against those simply telling a better story. The scale of the problem demanded a response. Studies show that over 50 percent of environmental claims lack adequate scientific backing. Companies making unsubstantiated claims gained unfair competitive advantage, while those investing seriously in real climate action struggled to differentiate themselves in crowded markets. The EU Green Claims Directive exists to end this dynamic—rewarding authentic environmental leadership and holding greenwashing accountable. What Changes on September 27, 2026 Starting that date, environmental claims must meet three non-negotiable requirements: These three requirements together signal something important: compliance is a management challenge as much as a communication challenge. Organizations that approach the directive as a reporting exercise will struggle. Those that embed its principles into governance, operations, and business strategy will thrive. Prohibited Claims: What Companies Can No Longer Say The directive explicitly prohibits claims that cannot meet these standards. Understanding these prohibitions is essential for any organization currently making environmental statements: Restrictions on “Carbon Neutral” and “Climate Positive” Addressing Vague and Partial Claims Why This Matters: The Competitive Opportunity The Green Claims Directive is a compliance requirement—but organizations that understand its deeper logic will recognize it as a market opportunity of significant proportions. Companies that move now—establishing rigorous environmental measurement, embedding climate and nature-positive governance into their operations, and securing independent verification before September 2026—gain first-mover advantage in markets increasingly demanding authenticity. Early adopters gain market trust, investor confidence, and regulatory resilience simultaneously. Organizations that build genuine internal capacity for environmental management emerge as the trusted leaders in their sectors. The Global Ripple Effect The EU is establishing the global standard, but it will not remain alone for long. Similar frameworks are already emerging in the United Kingdom, Canada, and other major economies. Organizations that build robust, verified environmental programs now will be positioned for global compliance rather than scrambling market by market as regulations tighten worldwide. What This Means for Your Organization If your organization makes environmental claims, the time to act is now. Start by auditing your current claims honestly: Which are scientifically substantiated? Which have been independently verified? Then build the foundation: * Rigorous baseline measurement across all scopes. The most important investment is organizational. Build the internal governance structures and technical capacities that make climate and nature-positive action a permanent part of how your organization operates. Green Initiative: A Partner for Authentic Transformation At Green Initiative, we support companies and destinations in building the internal institutional capacity to measure, manage, and verify their environmental impact rigorously. We help organizations understand that decarbonization and nature restoration are investments that strengthen long-term resilience and open access to sustainability-driven markets. Through science-based frameworks and independent certification, we walk alongside organizations on this journey. The standard is rising. The opportunity belongs to those who rise with it. This article was prepared by Yves Hemelryck from the Green Initiative Team. Related Reading

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Five Years of Building Together: Green Initiative’s Contributions to Climate-Smart Tourism

Five Years of Building Together: Green Initiative’s Contributions to Climate-Smart Tourism

Over the past five years, Green Initiative has evolved from a technical partner into a catalyst for the global movement toward climate-smart tourism. By working alongside United Nations partners and aligning with the Glasgow Declaration on Climate Action in Tourism, we have helped reshape how the industry perceives its role in achieving the goals of the Paris Agreement. Our philosophy is simple: we don’t just provide solutions; we build the architecture for others to lead. A Shared Architecture: Democratizing Climate Knowledge Our approach has always centered on partnership over imposition. We believe that for climate action to be effective, it must be accessible. This commitment led to the development of frameworks and practical guides designed to help destinations and businesses measure, monitor, and reduce their carbon footprints. Catalyzing Local Leadership The true measure of our success is the independence and resilience of our partners. We provide the technical rigor, but the destinations, communities, and businesses remain the true architects of their transformation. Milestones in Climate Excellence Partner Achievement Machu Picchu, Peru Three consecutive Carbon Neutral recertifications. Bonito, Brazil Established as the world’s first Carbon Neutral ecotourism destination. National Frameworks Collaborative policy development with the Brazilian government. Private Sector Leaders Kuoda Travel, Rio da Prata Group, and Estância Mimosa achieving Climate Positive status. “Our comparative advantage lies in the balance of deep technical rigor and humble partnership. We don’t compete by keeping expertise proprietary; we contribute to the knowledge commons.” From Carbon Measurement to Systemic Transformation The next phase of Green Initiative’s work reflects a maturing understanding of climate action. Transformation cannot happen in isolation; it happens when frameworks are embedded into policy and when knowledge spreads across borders. Our evolution toward Circular Economy principles represents this holistic shift. By addressing waste reduction and resource efficiency alongside carbon measurement, we help tourism systems build long-term economic resilience and align with the UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). A Global Model for Stewardship The model we have refined over the last half-decade transcends geography. Whether it is the ancient stones of Angkor Wat in Cambodia, the iconic Cristo Redentor in Brazil, or the desert landscapes of Petra in Jordan, the demand for science-based, transparent climate action is universal. These destinations are not seeking “green” labels for marketing; they are institutions committed to legacy and stewardship. The Path Ahead: Measuring Resilience As we look to the future, Green Initiative remains focused on supporting others to succeed. Our impact is not measured by the number of certificates issued, but by: Five years in, the architecture for a climate-responsible future is being built. The tourism sector is no longer just observing the transition—it is becoming the solution. As we celebrate this five-year milestone, the global community’s recognition serves as both a validation and a catalyst for what lies ahead. From Green Initiative being named the World’s Leading Sustainable Organisation at the 2024 World Sustainable Travel & Hospitality Awards, to our partners at Bonito Carbon Neutral winning the prestigious FIDI 2025 Award and FUNDTUR-MS securing the Embratur Visit Brazil 2026 Award for Regenerative Tourism, the momentum is undeniable. This excellence is echoed in the private sector, with the Rio da Prata Group recently winning Gold at the 2026 WTM Latin America Responsible Tourism Awards, and Green Initiative being honored for Net Zero Progression at the Environmental Finance Sustainable Company Awards 2025. These accolades—alongside Machu Picchu’s continued dominance as the World’s Leading Tourist Attraction and its pioneering carbon-neutral status recognized by Lonely Planet and the UN Tourism Green Projects Challenge—prove that the architecture we have built together is no longer just a vision. It is a multi-award-winning reality that is redefining the future of a nature-positive planet. For more information on our frameworks or to download our Climate Action Guides, visit the Green Initiative resources portal or get in touch. Prepared by Yves Hemelryck from the Green Initiative Team. Related Reading

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Peru First in Latin America to Enshrine Circular Economy Roadmap for Tourism

Sustainable Tourism: The First Mover

Peru has become the first country in Latin America to enshrine a circular-economy roadmap as part of its climate action in tourism national policy. On March 27th, by executive decree, Peru quietly made history. The government of José María Balcázar Zelada signed Decree Supreme N° 003-2026-MINCETUR, approving the Circular Economy Roadmap for Tourism to 2030 — the first legally binding instrument of its kind in Latin America. The timing was not accidental. With Peru`s tourism sector preparing for COP31 in Turkey, and the Glasgow Declaration on Climate Action in Tourism — the sector’s most ambitious collective climate commitment, with over 850 signatory organizations — advocating  for exactly this kind of national policy architecture, Peru stepped forward as the region’s standard-bearer. The declaration, launched at COP26, calls on all signatories to halve tourism emissions by 2030 and reach net zero before 2050. What had been a global pledge now has, for the first time in the Americas, a national legal framework behind it. The numbers attached to the roadmap outline a significant future opportunity. While circularity is not currently a major contributor to the tourism GDP, the government projects that by 2030, the implementation of these practices could inject 1.2 billion soles (roughly $345m) into the sector’s economy. Alongside this growth, nearly 31,000 new jobs are expected to be created in sustainable tourism activities along circular value chains. The environmental targets according to MINCETUR are equally ambitious: the mitigation of 74m tonnes of CO₂ equivalent and the restoration of more than 2m hectares of ecosystems and natural and cultural heritage. For Minister of Trade and Tourism José Reyes Llanos, the logic is straightforward. “Tourism is one of the activities with the greatest capacity to generate opportunity,” he said at the roadmap’s official launch. “But it also faces an obvious challenge: to grow without compromising the very resources that make its own development possible.” That tension — between growth and the environmental foundations that sustain it — is precisely what the roadmap is designed to manage. From Declaration to Decree The roadmap emerge from one year of technical and participatory work, bringing together public agencies, private operators, academia, civil society and communities. The legal architecture is equally robust: implementation is co-supervised by both MINCETUR and the Ministry of Environment (MINAM), with a built-in mechanism for periodic revision and a sectoral commission — designed to lock in multi-stakeholders’ governance platform. For the UN Tourism Office of the Americas, the significance of Peru’s move extends well beyond its borders. Heitor Kadri, the office’s regional representative, was unambiguous about what this moment represents for the global agenda: “We applaud Peru’s effort to position circularity as a strategy for climate action, sustainability, and competitiveness by translating its commitment into an actionable policy instrument, in line with the requirements of the Glasgow Declaration. For the Americas, this serves as a relevant reference that may inspire other countries in the region and globally. UN Tourism will continue to actively support Peru in implementation and in sharing its expertise.” — Heitor Kadri, UN Tourism Office Representative of the Americas Competitiveness, Not Just Compliance Sophia Dávila, Director of Environmental Tourism Affairs at MINCETUR, and the official who led the roadmap’s technical construction, is at pains to frame the instrument in competitive rather than regulatory terms: “This roadmap is the result of a wide participatory process. By 2030, Peru will not only be known for its wonders but for its circularity in tourism. We are transforming the entire value chain—from waste reduction to water efficiency, ensuring that every tourist’s visit leaves a positive footprint on our territory.” – Sophia Dávila, Director of Environmental Tourism Affairs, MINCETUR That framing reflects a deliberate strategic choice. In a region where private operators have long dismissed environmental mandates as sunk costs, Peru is anchoring its broader climate-action goals directly to the bottom line. Positioning circularity as a driver of business competitiveness, rather than a regulatory compliance burden, is the surest way to accelerate the industry investments in low-carbon business models. The Coalition Behind the Policy The roadmap’s journey from concept to decree was led by MINCETUR and supported by the Spanish Agency for International Development Cooperation (AECID) through the “Turismo Circular Perú” project — officially titled the Coalition for a Circular, Inclusive and Climate-Smart Tourism — which CANATUR, Peru’s national tourism chamber, led as its executing organization, with Green Initiative as its technical partner. Carlos Loayza, CANATUR’s General Manager, described the ambition behind the transformation the project seeks to drive: “We are looking to transform the sector with a new tourism model, where recycling, energy efficiency, sustainable design and climate commitment are part of the DNA of micro, small and medium-sized tourism enterprises. We believe there is enormous opportunity here, and this project will consolidate it ahead of 2030.” Within the Turismo Circular project specifically, technical execution relied on a strategic collaboration between MINCETUR, CANATUR and Green Initiative. Acting as a key advisory partner, Green Initiative supported core aspects of the process by providing the methodological frameworks required for consistent and well-informed decision-making. This advisory role is part of the firm’s broader commitment to support Peru’s climate action policy and practice, guiding circular and climate-smart tourism strategies across destinations including Machu Picchu, Ollantaytambo, Choquequirao and Cabo Blanco. The Road to Turkey With COP31 on the horizon and tourism now embedded in the global climate roadmap for the first time, the question is no longer whether the sector can contribute to climate action — but which countries will help define how. Peru’s accumulated expertise and recent policy commitments position it as a credible reference for the region, and potentially beyond, if ambition continues to translate into implementation. The circular-economy roadmap carries meaningful institutional weight: its targets are binding rather than aspirational, and its governance structure is built around a commission with a formal mandate rather than an advisory body. For a region that has historically struggled to convert environmental ambition into durable policy, that distinction matters — and is worth watching closely. Prepared by Yves

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Peru Advances Global Climate Agenda New Signatories Join the Glasgow Declaration

Peru Advances Global Climate Agenda: New Signatories Join the Glasgow Declaration

In a significant step forward for international climate action, Peru has strengthened its position as a leader in sustainable tourism. As recently highlighted by UN Tourism’s One Planet Network, the country is expanding its commitment to the Glasgow Declaration through the inclusion of four new strategic actors. This milestone follows the technical standard set by Machu Picchu, which recently achieved its third Carbon Neutral certification. The new signatories—Continental Travel, the District of El Alto (Piura), Parque de las Leyendas (Lima), and Ollantaytambo (Cusco)—represent a multi-sectoral commitment to decarbonization, biodiversity, and cultural heritage. Strategic Pathways By joining the declaration, these entities commit to the five strategic pathways: Measure, Decarbonize, Regenerate, Collaborate, and Finance. This collective effort aims to halve global tourism emissions by 2030 and reach Net Zero as soon as possible before 2050. The transition is supported by technical frameworks provided by Green Initiative, ensuring that climate goals are met with technical rigor and measurable results. The official announcement and detailed insights can be found at the One Planet Network / UN Tourism website here. Prepared by Yves Hemelryck from the Green Initiative Team. FAQ: Understanding Climate Action in Global Tourism Related Reading

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Professional verification of ISO 14068-1 carbon neutrality documents at a European shipping port, representing EU Green Claims Directive compliance for exporters

Securing European Market Access: How ISO 14068-1 Solves the 2026 EU Green Claims Challenge

The European Union has officially redefined the rules of corporate sustainability. With the Empowering Consumers for the Green Transition (ECGT) Directive (EU 2024/825) reaching its crucial transposition deadline this month (March 2026) and full market enforcement beginning on September 27, 2026, the era of unregulated environmental marketing is over.   For companies exporting to or operating within the EU, this legislation introduces strict new standards for transparency. Generic claims like “climate neutral” or “eco-friendly” are now strictly prohibited unless backed by rigorous, independent verification.   At Green Initiative, we view the ECGT directive not as a regulatory hurdle, but as a powerful market differentiator. By anchoring our Carbon Neutral certification in the ISO 14068-1:2023 international standard, we provide organizations with the exact scientific and methodological framework required to turn European compliance into a distinct competitive advantage. Does your business meet the 2026 EU Green Claims standards? Here is a deep dive into exactly how the ISO 14068-1 standard beautifully aligns with—and seamlessly satisfies—the European Union’s newest and strictest regulations. 1. The End of “Offset-Only” Claims: The Mitigation Hierarchy The EU ECGT Rule: The directive explicitly bans claims that a product or company has a “neutral” or “positive” environmental impact if that claim is based solely on purchasing carbon offsets without reducing actual value-chain emissions. The ISO 14068-1 Solution: This is where the ISO standard proves its immense value. ISO 14068-1 operates on a strict Mitigation Hierarchy. It legally requires organizations to prioritize direct greenhouse gas (GHG) emission reductions within their own operations and supply chains before any offsets are applied. Under a Green Initiative certification, carbon credits are only utilized to neutralize the unavoidable, residual emissions. This proven “reduction-first” approach ensures complete compliance with the ECGT’s ban on offset-only greenwashing.   2. Eliminating Vague Future Promises: The Carbon Management Plan The EU ECGT Rule: The EU now prohibits environmental claims about future performance (e.g., “We will be net-zero by 2040”) unless they are supported by a clear, objective, and verifiable implementation plan with measurable, time-bound targets. The ISO 14068-1 Solution: ISO 14068-1 does not allow for empty promises. To achieve and maintain certification, the standard mandates the creation of a comprehensive Carbon Neutrality Management Plan. This requires organizations to establish science-based short-term and long-term targets, a detailed transition pathway, and regular progress monitoring. Because Green Initiative enforces this standard, our clients inherently possess the exact “verifiable implementation plan” the European Union demands.   3. Banning Unverified Labels: The Power of Third-Party Assurance The EU ECGT Rule: The directive outlaws the use of sustainability labels that are self-created or not based on a recognized certification scheme verified by an independent third party. The ISO 14068-1 Solution: ISO 14068-1 is the globally recognized successor to PAS 2060, developed by the International Organization for Standardization. A Green Initiative Carbon Neutral certificate is not a self-declared badge; it is an internationally respected, third-party verified assurance process. This provides European regulators, B2B partners, and consumers with the ultimate guarantee of structural integrity and scientific accuracy.   4. High-Integrity Removals Over Cheap Avoidance The EU ECGT Rule: The EU is heavily scrutinizing the quality of the carbon credits used for residual emissions, demanding high integrity and transparency regarding whether credits represent actual carbon removals or merely emission reductions. The ISO 14068-1 Solution: The standard sets rigorous criteria for the offset projects utilized. Through Green Initiative’s ecosystem, organizations invest in high-durability, nature-positive removals—such as vital reforestation and biodiversity projects in the Amazon and Andes. This aligns perfectly with the EU’s demand for transparency and high-quality, permanent carbon sequestration.   Conclusion: Your Passport to the European Market The September 2026 enforcement of the ECGT Directive represents a monumental shift toward market authenticity. Organizations can no longer rely on clever marketing to demonstrate their climate commitment; they must rely on science. By utilizing the ISO 14068-1:2023 standard, Green Initiative equips businesses with a robust, legally sound framework that anticipates and exceeds global regulations. A Green Initiative Carbon Neutral certificate is more than a statement of environmental responsibility—it is an organization’s most secure passport for sustained, compliant growth in the European market and beyond. Is your organization ready for the September 2026 deadline? Book a Compliance Readiness Assessment with our UN-endorsed specialists to align your carbon claims with ISO 14068-1. This article was prepared by Yves Hemelryck from the Green Initiative Team. Frequently Asked Questions: The 2026 EU Green Claims Transition Related Reading

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