If there is one thing the recent 10 year anniversary of the Paris Agreement demonstrated, it’s that despite decades of environmental awareness and countless sustainability initiatives, we’re still struggling to translate knowledge into action that turns the tide on global warming. The issue isn’t a lack of information—it’s how we communicate about sustainability. The message often simply misses the mark.
The Credibility Gap: When Words Don’t Match Actions
Sustainability faces a fundamental trust problem. Companies and governments are quick to announce ambitious environmental commitments, but implementation rarely lives up to their promises.
Consider the wave of corporate “net zero by 2050” pledges. Companies amongst the world’s biggest polluters have made these announcements with great fanfare, yet many lack credible transition plans or are actually their increasing pollution levels. When Volkswagen promoted its “clean diesel” vehicles while actively cheating on emissions tests, public skepticism hit new heights in relation to corporate environmental claims.
This pattern has created a default assumption that sustainability announcements are performative rather than substantive and are essentially “greenwashing.” But the problem isn’t limited to fossil fuel companies and car manufacturers; even well-intentioned organisations struggle to communicate the messy reality of incremental progress without sounding like they’re making excuses.
Lost in Translation: The Jargon Barrier
Another issue is that sustainability has developed its own impenetrable language. Terms like “carbon neutrality,” “circular economy,” “scope 3 emissions,” and “lifecycle assessments” dominate conversations, creating barriers for anyone without specialised knowledge.
Try explaining to your neighbour why buying carbon offsets for a flight might not actually reduce emissions, or why paper bags aren’t necessarily better than plastic ones when you account for their full environmental footprint. These nuanced discussions require understanding complex systems—supply chains, manufacturing processes, waste streams—that most people have neither the time nor interest to master.
Terms like “environmental externalities” or “regenerative agriculture,” are practically incomprehensible to general audiences. This technical vocabulary becomes a wall that keeps people out rather than a bridge that brings them in.
The Doom Loop: Why Fear Doesn’t Motivate
Much sustainability messaging follows a predictable pattern: highlight catastrophic future scenarios, emphasize personal guilt about consumption habits, and demand sacrifice. While this approach might seem logical—surely people will act if they understand the stakes—it often backfires.
Consider typical climate communications: melting ice caps, displaced climate refugees, species extinction, and uninhabitable regions. These messages trigger psychological defence mechanisms. When threats feel overwhelming and personally unmanageable, people often respond by disengaging rather than taking action.
The framing around individual responsibility compounds this. Messages like “your hamburger is destroying the rainforest” can generate guilt but rarely inspire sustained behaviour change. Instead, they create a sense of futility—if everything I do is wrong, why bother trying?
We need more compelling visions of what sustainable living could look like that are linked to the day-to-day problems people are wrestling with. Cities with clean air and desirable public spaces, local food systems that strengthen communities, homes that are healthier and cheaper to operate, economies that create meaningful work. These positive narratives are a minority in mainstream sustainability communication.
The Invisibility Problem: Slow Crises Don’t Grab Attention
Environmental problems are fundamentally difficult to perceive. Unlike a house fire or a car accident, climate change and biodiversity loss unfold gradually over years and decades. The connection between today’s choices and tomorrow’s consequences feels abstract and theoretical.
When a heatwave hits, people experience discomfort, but attributing it to climate change requires understanding statistical trends and long-term patterns. When a local species disappears, most people don’t notice—ecosystems are resilient until suddenly they’re not, and by then it’s often too late.
This temporal and spatial distance makes sustainability feel less urgent than immediate concerns like paying rent, advancing in careers, or managing daily responsibilities. A problem that might severely impact life in 2050 struggles to compete with challenges happening right now.
The Confusion of Competing Priorities
Perhaps most frustrating is the lack of consistent, actionable guidance. Different experts and organisations promote conflicting priorities, while lobbyists for the fossil fuel and meat industries in particular peddle fake news, leaving people genuinely confused about what matters.
Should you prioritise buying local food or organic food? Is it better to drive an old fuel-efficient car or buy a new electric vehicle? Should you focus on reducing meat consumption, eliminating air travel, or switching to renewable energy? Are reusable bags better than plastic, or do their manufacturing impacts cancel out the benefits?
The honest answer—”it depends on your specific circumstances and the full lifecycle analysis”—doesn’t provide the clear direction people crave. Meanwhile, some individuals meticulously sort recycling while major systemic issues like industrial emissions or agricultural practices remain largely unaddressed.
This fragmentation creates paralysis. Without clear priorities, people either make token gestures that feel meaningful but have minimal impact, or they disengage entirely, figuring that nothing they do really matters anyway.
So What Can We Do?
To communicate sustainability more effectively, we need to shift our approach in several key ways:
Lead with benefits, not sacrifice. Instead of “stop flying to save the planet,” use messaging around the benefits of train travel for example. People respond better to positive visions of what they’re moving toward rather than what they’re giving up. Show how sustainable choices can improve quality of life—lower bills, healthier food, less pollution, more liveable neighbourhoods.
Make it concrete and local. Connect sustainability to immediate, tangible concerns: “This solar installation will save your community £2 million over 10 years that can fund schools” or “Restoring this wetland will reduce flooding on the sports fields.” Show people the impact in their own backyard.
Build trust through transparency. Acknowledge trade-offs honestly. When a company shares both progress and setbacks—”We reduced emissions by 15% but missed our 20% target because of supply chain challenges”—it builds more credibility than perfect-sounding claims. Admit uncertainty where it exists.
Simplify without dumbing down. Use clear language and vivid analogies. “This wind farm produces enough electricity for 50,000 homes” is more meaningful than “500 megawatts of capacity.” Explain the ‘why’ behind recommendations so people understand the logic, not just the rules.
Focus on collective action, not individual guilt. Frame sustainability as a shared challenge requiring systemic solutions, not just personal virtue. Engage people around calls for better public transport rather than criticising them for driving to work. Help people understand how their voice and vote matter as much as their choices.
Tell human stories. Data and graphs are necessary but insufficient. Share stories of regenerative practices, communities thriving, and innovators solving problems. People connect with narratives, not just numbers.
Provide clear, prioritised actions. Rather than overwhelming people with 50 things they should do, identify the 3-5 highest-impact actions for different contexts. “If you can only do one thing, electrify your heating” gives people a starting point rather than paralysis.
The goal is meeting people where they are with messages that inspire rather than shame, clarify rather than confuse, and empower rather than overwhelm.
Moving Forward
The communication problem in sustainability isn’t insurmountable, but solving it requires acknowledging these challenges. We need messaging that builds trust through transparency, translates complexity into accessible concepts, offers hopeful visions alongside honest assessments, makes abstract problems tangible, and provides clear, prioritised guidance for action.
Until we bridge this communication gap, we’ll continue the frustrating pattern of high awareness but insufficient action—knowing what needs to happen while struggling to make it real.
