Tuesday, June 24, 2014

PLASTIC LUMBER MAKER SETTLES CHARGES WITH FTC OVER MISLEADING CONSUMERS

FROM:  U.S. FEDERAL TRADE COMMISSION 
FTC Brings Second Case This Year Against Plastic Lumber Products Marketer For Misleading Environmental Claims

For the second time this year, the Federal Trade Commission has settled charges that a company that markets plastic lumber and related products misled consumers regarding the environmental attributes of its products.

Under the FTC proposed settlement, the company, American Plastic Lumber, Inc. (APL), is prohibited from making misleading statements about the amount of post-consumer recycled plastic content in its products or other environmental benefit claims and must have competent and reliable evidence to support any such claims.

“The FTC takes environmental marketing very seriously, and works hard to ensure that consumers are not misled when it comes to ‘green’ claims,” said Jessica Rich, Director of the Federal Trade Commission’s Bureau of Consumer Protection. “Businesses should consult the FTC’s Green Guides to understand what environmental clams they legally can and cannot make.”

APL is a California corporation, based in Shingle Springs, CA. It distributes plastic lumber products, such as picnic tables, benches, trash bins, wheel stops, and speed bumps, to end-use consumers and businesses in the construction industry.

In its administrative complaint, the FTC alleges that from at least June 2011 through June 2013, APL’s advertisements and marketing materials implied that its products – and the recycled plastics they contain – were made virtually all out of post-consumer recycled content such as milk jugs and detergent bottles. The complaint states that these claims were deceptive and misleading, and that in reality the products contained less than 79 percent post-consumer content, on average.

In addition, the complaint states, about eight percent of APL’s products contained no post-consumer recycled content at all, and nearly seven percent of the products were made with only 15 percent post-consumer content. These deceptive and unsubstantiated claims, the complaint concludes, violate Section 5 of the FTC Act, which prohibits deceptive acts or practices in commerce.

The proposed consent order prohibits APL from making deceptive claims regarding environmental benefits for any product or package. The terms of the settlement are similar to those in the first case the FTC brought related to unsubstantiated “green” lumber claims. That case, against N.E.W. Plastics Corp., was announced in February 2014. The Commission issued the final complaint and order in April 2014.

Specifically, the proposed order prohibits APL from making representations about the recycled content, post-consumer recycled content, or any other environmental benefit of its products or packaging unless they are true, not misleading, and can be substantiated by competent and reliable evidence.  It also provides that if, in general, experts in the relevant scientific field would conclude it necessary, such evidence must be competent and reliable scientific evidence.

It further requires APL to substantiate any recycled-content claims by demonstrating that the content is made of materials that were recovered from the waste stream. Finally, the proposed order requires APL to maintain and make available to the FTC for five years all of its advertising and promotional material making claims covered by the order, materials it relied upon in making such claims, as well as any tests, reports, studies, surveys or other evidence that contradicts or calls into question any environmental claims it makes. The order will expire in 20 years.

No comments:

Post a Comment