Are Charities Becoming Tools for Polluters’ Greenwashing?
Foodthink Says
Who is to hold corporations accountable for cutting pollution and safeguarding consumer health? Beyond government bodies, civil society organisations acting in the public interest can play a crucial role. Through research and advocacy, they can expose corporate pollution, urge firms to curb their environmental footprint, and hold them accountable for remediation. Yet Foodthink has noticed that among the environmental groups receiving funding from food delivery giant Meituan, some are specifically dedicated to reducing plastic waste. These organisations once levelled heavy criticism at the food delivery industry, publishing data-driven analyses that named specific companies. However, over the past two years, these voices have grown increasingly quiet.
This compels us to ask: when polluting companies begin funding environmental organisations, what does it mean for those groups? And what does it signify for the environmental issues we care about?
In episode 46 of the “Food Talk” podcast, we invited two seasoned environmental activists, Sun Shan and Ma Tianjie, to delve into these questions. Taking this as a starting point, we further explore the complex dynamics between the corporations that generate environmental and social problems, the NGOs striving to solve them, and their intricate relationships with government bodies, the media, and the public. This article is adapted from that episode.


This Episode’s Guest
Sun Shan
An ecological practitioner and co-founder of the Shanshui Conservation Center. She began farming in 2015 to experience firsthand the interconnectedness of land, agriculture, food, ecology, and self-sufficient (homesteading) living. Now based in Canada, she runs “Chi Garden,” an ecological farm and fermentation kitchen. She attended the 16th Conference of the Parties (COP16) to the UN Convention on Biological Diversity in Colombia (2024) and the 15th COP in Montreal (2022).

This Episode’s Guest
Ma Tianjie
A freelance writer specialising in environmental issues. He has been engaged in environmental advocacy since 2004 and previously served as a director for an international environmental organisation. He has long focused on environmental governance in China, contributing analysis and commentary to various media outlets. His latest book, *In Search of Green China* (追寻绿色中国), was published this February.

This Episode’s Host
Tian Le
Founding editor at Foodthink and convener of the Beijing Organic Farmers Market. He stopped ordering takeaways due to an intolerance for single-use waste and the exploitation of delivery riders, yet he still wrestles with guilt and frustration over the environmental and social impacts of his everyday consumption.
I. Polluting Corporations: Why Fund Environmental Organisations?


II. The APP Paper Controversy and Independent Environmental NGOs: Then and Now

Tianle: There was a brief episode back then: just as environmental groups were criticising Golden Tree Paper for its deforestation, the company suddenly donated a sum of money to a major national environmental organisation in China to fund their annual conference.
Ma Tianjie: Exactly. It was a public relations strategy: if you claim I am not environmentally friendly, I will donate to environmental groups, join green initiatives, and cultivate a greener corporate image. However, this sponsorship sparked immense controversy within that organisation; many members believed they should not have accepted the funds.
Tianle: Ms Liao Xiaoyi, founder of ‘Global Village’—a prominent local environmental organisation in China at the time—was serving as a council member of that alliance. She published an open letter resigning from the post, citing her objection to accepting such sponsorship. It is evident that twenty years ago, environmental groups here could unite to hold polluting companies to account. Confronted with corporate attempts to buy them off, people held firm to their principles; at least someone would speak up, drawing support and praise from peers. Yet in recent years, it appears the profession has lost interest in such matters, with hardly anyone discussing how to handle funding from polluting enterprises. How do you believe this shift came about?

III. The Dilemma Facing NGOs

Tianle: Yes. While economic growth has been rapid, funding and support for genuine environmental organisations have not increased proportionally.
Ma Tianjie: Exactly. I’d like to add another point: these situations aren’t just a two-sided matter between corporations and civil society organisations. Regulators should be part of the equation, yet as the “elephant in the room,” they’ve effectively gone missing from the discussion. What role is the regulatory system actually playing? I think that question needs to be examined too. A clear trend at the moment is that companies are wielding increasing influence over rule-making within regulatory frameworks, particularly in international negotiations, where industry associations and corporate coalitions are highly active. They have a keen nose for shifts in regulation. The moment they sense the rules of the game might change, they step in early to steer new frameworks in a direction that benefits their business models. They engage with considerable professionalism, promoting “evidence-based decision-making” while opposing the “precautionary principle.” In practice, this means arguing that if the evidence isn’t yet conclusive, regulators shouldn’t rush to impose bans but should instead wait for a few more years of study.
Tianle: This dynamic plays out in domestic policy-making as well. Governments aren’t entirely independent when drafting regulatory policies. Corporate influence is growing, while the voice of environmental groups and other bodies representing the public interest is weakening. Take the food and agriculture sector, for instance. Corporations are directly involved in setting many food safety standards. They can lobby governments to amend regulations, tilting policy in their favour. On the side of consumers and smallholder farmers, however, there is simply no counterweight capable of matching corporate influence. Standards pushed by large enterprises often sideline small farmers. For organisations championing their cause, intervening in policy formulation is fraught with difficulty: there’s little funding, and the research and lobbying process is incredibly time-consuming. Consequently, we see corporate public relations and agenda-setting capabilities growing stronger. This includes using media channels to steer public opinion, packaging favourable narratives as “science” or “common sense” so they are gradually accepted by the public. Meanwhile, grassroots environmental and charitable forces are increasingly marginalised. Too often, they are left to pick up the pieces only after the rules are set and policies have taken effect. The balance of power has become profoundly skewed, and the rules of the game are steadily tilting in favour of large corporations.

IV. How NGOs ‘Dance with Wolves’

Tianle: I even have a concern: if things continue like this, will polluting companies and certain environmental NGOs end up colluding? As an environmental organisation, our original goal is for pollution to be completely eradicated. Ideally, we should be “out of a job”. But the reality is that some companies continue to create pollution and rake in massive profits, while diverting a tiny fraction of those profits to fund environmental groups to carry out superficial green initiatives, such as litter picking or recycling drives. This way, the companies maintain a positive public image, and the NGOs can keep their operations running with that funding. But the problem is that when environmental groups are busy collecting bottles, they have no time to ask where those bottles came from in the first place, or why waste is piling up. The result is a strange vicious cycle: the pollution isn’t truly solved, the companies carry on business as usual, and the NGOs end up acting as nothing more than tools for corporate greenwashing.
Sun Shan: Yes, it’s actually quite alarming. It’s even more glaring at international negotiation venues. Outside the conference halls, corporations and industry associations are setting up booths and hosting events. The whole scene feels like a carnival, drenched in corporate eco-promotion. But how much of that “green” is actually greenwashing, window-dressing, or outright fakery? Too many NGOs use these platforms to lend credibility to these companies, effectively polishing their green image. Meanwhile, genuinely “deep green” environmental groups—such as smaller organisations backing Indigenous land rights struggles and environmental justice campaigns—are completely marginalised and have virtually no voice in these spaces.
Survival is certainly no easy task for civil society organisations, but regardless of how the external landscape shifts, we still need to periodically turn back and ask ourselves: What values are we truly upholding? Whose side are we really on? Standing with victims, smallholder farmers, landless communities, and Indigenous peoples is certainly harder now, because solidarity among the marginalised is inherently difficult. But if NGOs aren’t standing with the vulnerable, who else should they stand with? I believe the fundamental stance of any NGO must be to stand with the vulnerable, with Mother Earth, and with the interests of the planet. Yet today, that line has grown dangerously blurred. Corporations are now talking about biodiversity and pitching their own “solutions”. Is this progress or a step backward? NGOs need to scrutinise these claims—distinguishing what’s genuine from what’s not, what’s merely performative, and what actually tackles the root causes. But this crucial work of discernment is still too rarely discussed within the sector. It needs to become the most openly and frankly debated issue on our agenda.
Tianle: You just mentioned greenwashing, faux-eco claims, and outright fakery. In reality, there are countless false solutions circulating right now. We often say you cannot expect to solve a problem using the very same logic that created it. Foodthink actually uses a specific tag for this category of initiatives: “false solutions”. Take Meituan, for instance. They boast that by introducing a “no cutlery required” option on their platform, they reduce waste generation by a certain amount annually. But the reality is that Meituan’s order volume grows every year, and the absolute quantity of waste produced surges in tandem. Compared to this massive influx of new waste, the disposable cutlery saved is negligible. Furthermore, in real-world scenarios, even when users opt out, merchants will still send cutlery anyway—either fearing negative reviews or simply lacking the time to check those preferences. That is a false solution in practice. So, how should consumers and the public learn to discern these?

Sun Shan: It’s undoubtedly a tough challenge. I know of journalists who, unable to publish full reports in mainstream outlets, now run their own podcasts or write for independent platforms, doing everything they can to get the facts out. You may not be an influencer, and your audience might be small, but if you hold onto the truth, you owe it to yourself to speak up.
Tianle: The harsh reality, however, is that a great deal of contemporary media coverage has effectively morphed into public relations material. We’ve recently observed that perhaps over 70% of so-called “in-depth reports” on agriculture and food are actually commissioned content paid for by corporate PR departments. Companies bankroll these pieces to craft narratives that highlight their positive contributions and polish their public image, while sidestepping their core issues. The firewall between editorial and advertising departments has all but collapsed. Serious journalists are routinely expected to write sponsored content, and are even tasked with making it read like investigative news. That said, some outlets continue to hold the line. For instance, Renwu magazine published an investigative piece that laid bare the predicament and minutiae of delivery riders trapped by algorithms, profoundly shaping public and policymaker perceptions of the issue. Not long ago, Southern Weekly released an investigation into carbon credits, exposing the sheer absurdity of “selling air” and the rampant fraud within carbon trading markets. Yet, reports of this calibre are becoming increasingly rare.
Transcript: Maomao
Editing: Yuyang, Tianle
