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FGIA Virtual Summer Summit: Legal Insights on Green Claims & PFAS Risk

Date: 20 June 2025
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FGIA Virtual Summer Summit: Legal Insights on Green Claims & PFAS Risk
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FGIAonline.org

Date: 20 June 2025

Keller and Heckman specialists equipped FGIA attendees with actionable guidance on navigating U.S. environmental marketing regulations and assessing PFAS鈥憆elated liabilities.

Those participating in the Fenestration and Glazing Industry Alliance (FGIA) Virtual Summer Summit gained several helpful legal insights in the sustainability realm, courtesy of experts from . Jean-Cyril Walker and Alexa Pecht gave a presentation entitled, 鈥溾橤reen鈥 Claims | Understanding Benefits & Risk in the U.S.,鈥 and their colleague James Votaw presented 鈥淧FAS | A Checklist for Assessing Potential Risks.鈥 Both contained action items companies can take now to help mitigate risk.

鈥淕reen鈥 Claims | Understanding Benefits & Risk in the U.S.

鈥淭he issue of making 鈥榞reen鈥 claims has been evolving over the last five years and is increasing in terms of risk,鈥 said Walker. 鈥淐ustomers and businesses are looking for better environmental performance of products and materials, but they need to understand the claims around that.鈥

Advertising basics

鈥淓nvironmental marketing claims use words like 鈥榮ustainable,鈥 鈥榗ircular,鈥 鈥榚co-friendly鈥 or 鈥榬ecyclable,鈥欌 said Walker. 鈥淵ou see these in emails and social media posts and other forms of communication. They are viewed as promoting a claim. All claims must be truthful and not misleading.鈥

Claims in advertisements are interpreted, said Walked, from the perspective of the reasonable consumer. 鈥淭his means that audience sophistication is considered,鈥 he said. 鈥淎 claim is misleading if a substantial number of consumers, around 20 percent, is misled.鈥

To avoid this, keep track of substantiation of claims, said Pecht. 鈥淪ubstantiation is the proof behind the claims you are making that would be material to the claims,鈥 she said. 鈥淚t cannot be developed after the fact. Claims must be supported by reliable, scientific evidence like studies or research. Generalized knowledge or assumptions are insufficient. Suppliers may provide certifications or assurances, but it really depends on the context in which they are used.鈥 Pecht recommended having internal documentation about one鈥檚 products. 鈥淎ssess your own claims with a critical eye, but also assess the claims being made to you,鈥 she said.

U.S. Green Claims Legal Framework

鈥淪ection 5 of the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) Act offers guides for the use of environmental marketing claims,鈥 said Pecht. 鈥淭hese are not regulations. They provide guidance on specific claims, often referred to as the 鈥榞reen guides.鈥 They establish 鈥榮afe harbor鈥 disclosures, but other disclosures may adequately qualify claims.鈥 However, they do not preempt state law, she warned.

Review and Guidance on Key Green Claims

鈥淐laims should be generally and clearly qualified,鈥 said Walker. 鈥淎spirational claims are ones that involve actions today that will not result in environmental benefits until the future, like plans to use a percentage of recyclable material by 2035. Advertisers must have a realistic scientific basis to believe that [the product] can achieve such a commitment or goal at the time claimed. There has to be a plan in place to implement the goal, even if the plan changes.鈥

Calling something 鈥渞ecyclable鈥 can be complicated, depending on where a company is doing business, said Walker. 鈥淭he term 鈥榬ecyclable鈥 should only be used when a product or package can be diverted or otherwise recovered from the waste stream through a recycling process for reuse or use in manufacturing or assembling another item,鈥 he said.

State Legislative Trends

Pecht shared that the state of California took the first step and provided baseline information about what can and cannot be claimed as 鈥渞ecyclable.鈥 鈥淪enate Bill 343 mandates that such 鈥榬ecycled鈥 claims must be about products made of materials collected by recycling programs that collectively encompass at least 60 percent of the population of the state and are sorted into defined streams for recycling professes by at least 60 percent of recycling programs,鈥 she said. Additionally, states like California, New York and Washington have 鈥渁dvanced recycling鈥 laws, and several other states are considering similar minimum recycling requirements.

Managing Risk

Walker recommended maintaining a substantiation file on any claim a company makes, since that is what a company will be asked to provide first. 鈥淢ake sure your claims are truthful and not misleading,鈥 he said. 鈥淭raining and education are key to positive collaboration between legal, marketing, research and development, sales and investors. It will become easier once it鈥檚 routine. Look at what your competitors are doing, too.鈥

PFAS | A Checklist for Assessing Potential Risks

In a related session focused on the environment, Votaw began with a brief overview of per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) chemicals. He discussed why they are of concern, where they are used in the fenestration and glazing industries, and the range of enterprise risks PFAS create for businesses, including regulatory, liability, commercial and supply chain risks.

鈥淧FAS are very useful chemistries but they are also very persistent in the environment,鈥 said Votaw. In the fenestration and glazing industry, they can be found in adhesives, architectural coatings, building wrap, caulks and joint compounds, doors and door components, flashing materials, window glass, window frames and locks, sealants and more. 鈥淢any PFAS breakdown only very slowly in the environment and even in the body,鈥 he said. 鈥淭he extent of that toxicity is up for debate but the agencies are treating PFAS as kind of a single class.鈥

He then provided participants with a checklist, which can be used to assess and mitigate risk.

  1. Know one鈥檚 products. The most important thing to know is where PFAS occurs in your products and your supply chain so you can make good decisions and strategies, he said. 鈥淵ou need to know what form they are taking and how they are used,鈥 said Votaw.
  2. Anticipate the potential need for product substitutions or exemptions. Companies may make voluntary substitutions. 鈥淏e in contact with your key suppliers,鈥 said Votaw. 鈥淧repare to seek exceptions by factually substantiating your need. Explore alternatives.鈥
  3. Understand and manage potential liability risks. 鈥淒evelop strategies to mitigate risks,鈥 he said. 鈥淐onsider a precautionary approach and substitute out where practical.鈥
  4. Invest in regulatory compliance planning, including lead time and resources. 鈥淵ou will need systems for monitoring developments on the state and federal levels,鈥 advised Votaw.
  5. Anticipate PFAS risk communication with your customers. 鈥淭hey will have questions,鈥 said Votaw. 鈥淐onsumers have the same challenges as you.鈥 He advised companies to be cautious about giving or accepting 鈥淧FAS-free鈥 representations.
  6. Keep management informed of risks, trends and strategies. 鈥淚nternal coordination across functions is critical,鈥 he concluded.

For more coverage about the FGIA Virtual Summer Summit, visit .

600450 FGIA Virtual Summer Summit: Legal Insights on Green Claims & PFAS Risk 黑料专区

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