Airline Sued For Greenwashing Over Use Of Carbon Offsets

Published date08 June 2023
Subject MatterEnvironment, Consumer Protection, Litigation, Mediation & Arbitration, Media, Telecoms, IT, Entertainment, Transport, Energy and Natural Resources, Energy Law, Environmental Law, Aviation, Class Actions, Advertising, Marketing & Branding, Dodd-Frank, Consumer Protection Act
Law FirmHolland & Knight
AuthorMr Andy Kriha, Judith Nemsick and Anita Mosner

A consumer filed a class action lawsuit against a commercial airline on May 30, 2023, in the U.S. District Court for the Central District of California alleging three violations of California state law related to unfair and deceptive practices. The suit alleges that the airline falsely claimed it had achieved carbon neutrality beginning in March 2020 when, it is alleged, the claims were based on the purchase and retirement of carbon offsets that do not represent real, verifiable carbon reductions. The suit further alleges that consumers paid the airline a premium for airline tickets under the mistaken belief that their flights had no carbon footprint. Advertisements by businesses that make broad environmental claims that cannot be backed up, often referred to as "greenwashing," have increasingly come under scrutiny of regulators and private citizens.

At the federal level, greenwashing claims generally fall under the authority of the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) under Section 5 of the FTC Act.1 Certain industries are carved out from FTC authority, including air carriers, which are regulated by the U.S. Department of Transportation (DOT).2 Congress specifically vested DOT with authority to regulate consumer protection matters in the aviation space.3 The Airline Deregulation Act (ADA) also contains a broadly construed express preemption clause prohibiting state law actions against air carriers that relate to an air carrier's "price, route or service."4 Because the complaint alleges that the airline's carbon-neutral advertising influenced its choice of air transportation service and "extracted higher prices from consumers," the new lawsuit will likely face motions to dismiss on ADA preemption grounds.

Notwithstanding the weakness of the current case, it is anticipated that businesses across sectors that rely on carbon offsets will face increasing public pressure, threats of litigation and an increasingly uncertain regulatory landscape. The FTC, in a move that signals its intent to more aggressively police greenwashing, is currently...

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