Apple Can No Longer Call Apple Watch 'Carbon Neutral' in Germany - MacRumors
Skip to Content

Apple Can No Longer Call Apple Watch 'Carbon Neutral' in Germany

Apple is no longer allowed to advertise the Apple Watch as a carbon neutral product in Germany, reports Reuters. A regional court in Frankfurt, Germany decided that Apple is violating competition law with the claim.

apple restore fund
Environmentalists with Deutsche Umwelthilfe complained that Apple was misleading consumers by stating that the Apple Watch was a carbon neutral product, and the court ultimately agreed. The environmental group hailed the ruling as a win against "greenwashing."

Back in 2023, Apple said that the Apple Watch was one of its first carbon neutral devices, furthering its goal to make every product carbon neutral by the end of 2030.

Apple uses clean energy to manufacture the Apple Watch, and to reduce carbon emissions for Apple Watch manufacturing, it also uses 30 percent renewable material by weight and ships 50 percent of the devices without air transportation. Apple claims that this results in a 75 percent reduction in product emissions, with the company using "high-quality carbon credits" to address the remaining emissions.

Germany takes issue with the carbon credits that Apple is claiming are valid for neutralizing Apple Watch carbon emissions. Apple has established environmental projects under its Restore Fund, supporting forest restoration projects in Paraguay and Brazil.

Apple outlined the project back in 2024. It is working with Forestal Apepu to develop fast-growing eucalyptus forests for timber production on deforested lands, while also protecting remaining natural forest areas. Ecologists believe that monocultures like the one Apple is supporting harm biodiversity and require too much water.

Apple leases the land for its forest projects, and because many of the leases expire in 2029, the German court said that the future of the forest project was not secure.

An Apple spokesperson told Reuters that it plans to stop using the carbon neutral labeling for Apple Watches to comply with upcoming EU legislation.

Popular Stories

Apple Environment Feature

Apple Hits Record 30% Recycled Content Across All Products in 2025

Thursday April 16, 2026 5:57 am PDT by
Apple today announced that a record 30% of material across all products it shipped in 2025 came from recycled content, alongside a series of other environmental milestones published in its annual Environmental Progress Report. The achievement marks new highs across several specific components. All batteries designed by Apple now use 100% recycled cobalt, all magnets use 100% recycled rare...
Apple Event Logo

Apple's Next Era Begins September 1

Thursday May 7, 2026 10:36 am PDT by
Apple recently announced that Tim Cook will be stepping down as CEO later this year, after 15 years of leading the company. Effective September 1, Apple's hardware engineering chief John Ternus will become the company's next CEO, while Cook will become executive chairman of Apple's board of directors. In his new role, Apple said Cook will assist with "certain aspects" of the company,...
Instagram Feature 2

PSA: Instagram Encrypted Messaging Ends on Friday, May 8

Tuesday May 5, 2026 8:24 am PDT by
Instagram will remove end-to-end encryption for direct messages between users from May 8, 2026. When the date comes around, Meta will potentially be able to see the contents of all messages between users on the social media platform. Encrypting messages has been an optional feature in Instagram since 2023, but in March of this year the social media platform quietly updated a help page to say ...

Top Rated Comments

Plutonius Avatar
9 months ago
My opinion only but I never believed in the concept of carbon credits.

You can pollute as much as you want as long as you spend money on enough carbon credits ?

How about not polluting in the first place ?
Score: 76 Votes (Like | Disagree)
HiVolt Avatar
9 months ago
An un-repairable, disposable product should never be called carbon neutral or any other eco buzzword.
Score: 45 Votes (Like | Disagree)
SilmarilFinder Avatar
9 months ago
You can pay (often comically little) to a company to offset your carbon emissions. All this really means is paying a company to plant a few trees somewhere, or buying unused carbon allowances from others. In reality, no genuine reduction happens (beyond perhaps planting a few trees). It’s mostly a marketing exercise. Having this court ruling is a good step, but it’s nowhere near enough.
Score: 40 Votes (Like | Disagree)
Andres Cantu Avatar
9 months ago
Mother Nature will not be very pleased with these news 😆
Score: 35 Votes (Like | Disagree)
ProbablyDylan Avatar
9 months ago
Carbon credits always seemed funny to me. Applying accounting trickery to environmentalism makes as much sense as it does to childcare.

It's ok if I starve one of my kids because I overfed the other one - on average, I'm doing a great job!
Score: 34 Votes (Like | Disagree)
9 months ago
In Germany the customer is in the center of everything. That’s why Germany is so a head of many countries in the world.
Score: 32 Votes (Like | Disagree)