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In this episode of Sanity Check, David R. Legates explores the rise of “greenhushing”—a growing corporate trend where companies pursue environmental initiatives but deliberately stay silent about them.
Contrasting it with the more familiar concept of greenwashing, this episode examines why major companies like Apple, HSBC, Nestlé, and Nike are pulling back from public climate messaging, even as many continue sustainability efforts behind the scenes. From regulatory pressure and legal risk to activist backlash and shifting political winds, “going green, then going dark” reflects a deeper tension between perception, policy, and profit.
Drawing on recent data and real-world examples—including the fallout faced by Bud Light—this episode unpacks how fear, incentives, and public scrutiny are reshaping corporate behavior in the climate space.
At its core, this conversation asks a larger question: in a world where messaging often matters more than substance, what happens when companies decide silence is the safest strategy?
https://www.southpole.com/publications/south-pole-net-zero-report-2025
https://sloanreview.mit.edu/article/the-greenhushing-trap
https://hbr.org/2025/09/are-companies-actually-scaling-back-their-climate-commitments
https://www.talkingclimate.ca/p/climate-hushingthe-quiet-trend-undermining
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No transcript available for this episode.