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Apple faces fresh legal attack over its carbon neutral Apple Watch claim

Apple Watch Series 9 was the first model to be described as carbon neutral

Seven Apple Watch buyers are suing Apple over how it allegedly made false and misleading claims that certain models are carbon neutral.

Apple first made a claim about carbon neutrality with the launch of the Apple Watch Series 9 in 2023, and immediately faced criticism. First a Chinese environment research organization called it “climate-washing,” and then European consumer groups agreed.

Now according to Reuters, a case has been filed by seven users of the Apple Watch Series 9, Apple Watch SE, and Apple Watch Ultra 2. They claim they would not have bought the watches, or would have paid less, if they had not been misled.

The complaint was filed on February 26, 2025, in San Jose, California federal court by representatives of Schubert Jonckheer & Kolbe LLP. The plaintiffs from California, Florida, and Washington, DC, specifically claim that Apple is using carbon offsetting rather than genuine carbon reductions.

More, Apple’s carbon offsetting projects concern land in Kenya and China, that have become protected from deforestation. The claimants say these two tree protection projects have nothing to do with Apple.

“In both cases, the carbon reductions would have occurred regardless of Apple’s involvement or the projects’ existence,” they said in their filing. “Because Apple’s carbon neutrality claims are predicated on the efficacy and legitimacy of these projects, Apple’s carbon neutrality claims are false and misleading.”

It’s not clear how usability of the watches, or offsets versus being truly carbon neutral impact the claimants. At a glance, the suit appears to be more about payouts to attorneys and claimants, than any real concern about environmental issues or impact to users.

Apple has not commented on the case. However, it has previously and repeatedly committed to having a 100% carbon neutral footprint by 2030.

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