New report helps destinations navigate EU sustainability claims law
- 5/13/2026
- 23 H
The European Travel Commission (ETC), the Global Destination Sustainability Movement (GDS-Movement) and NECSTouR launched Proof, Not Promises: A Practical Guide to the EU Empowering Consumers Directive for Destinations, a new report designed to help destinations, tourism businesses, and event organisers respond to one of the most significant regulatory shifts in sustainability communication.
The report provides
practical guidance on the EU’s Empowering Consumers for the Green Transition
Directive (EU) 2024/825, which will apply from 27 September 2026 and
fundamentally changes how environmental claims to consumers can be made across
Europe. Claims will need to be clear, specific, evidence-based, and not
misleading, applying across text, visuals, labels, and branding.
Supporting a shift in sustainability communication
The guidance is relevant
to destinations, convention bureaux, venues, event organisers, and any
organisation communicating sustainability-related information to consumers.
It highlights a shift
from narrative-led sustainability messaging to more evidence-based
communication where claims must be supported by verifiable data and consistent
internal processes. It also emphasises the need for alignment between
marketing, operations, and data functions to ensure coherence in how
sustainability is defined, measured, and communicated across organisations in
tourism and events.
Practical guidance for implementation
The publication offers
practical guidance to the Directive, clarifying what credible sustainability
claims require in terms of evidence. It also addresses key risks, including
avoiding both greenwashing and “greenhushing” caused by regulatory uncertainty.
Opportunity alongside compliance
The guide frames the
Directive not only as a compliance requirement, but also as an opportunity to
improve the quality, transparency and credibility of sustainability
communication.
By strengthening internal
evidence systems and improving consistency across functions, organisations can
enhance trust with stakeholders and improve the clarity of their sustainability
messaging.
Closing the capability gap
The publication
identifies a wider need across the sector to strengthen data, governance and
evidence capabilities. Organisations that invest in these areas are expected to
be better positioned to meet regulatory expectations and improve credibility in
the marketplace.







