Companies and banks talk a lot about net zero these days. But a transition plan is what separates a real promise from a marketing slide. A good plan shows the money, the milestones, and the methods.

Greenwashing hides in vague words and missing data. We can use a few simple tools to see through the noise.

Let's start by looking at what a real plan needs, compared to a weak one.

Table 1: Anatomy of a Credible Net Zero Transition Plan
Core ElementStrong Disclosure (Credible)Weak Disclosure (Greenwash Risk)
Baseline EmissionsFull Scope 1, 2, and material Scope 3 data, verified by a third party.Only mentions Scope 1 or 2, ignores supply chain emissions.
Interim TargetsClear 2025 or 2030 science-based targets, not just a 2050 goal.Only a distant 2050 net zero pledge with no near-term checkpoints.
Capital Expenditure (Capex)Shows exactly how much money is shifting from fossil fuels to green assets.Uses terms like "investing in transition" without specific dollar amounts or timelines.
Policy & GovernanceBoard-level oversight, with executive pay linked to climate milestones.Sustainability report handled by a small marketing team with no board reporting.

Numbers don't lie, but people can hide them. The next table looks at how financial institutions are using sector-specific metrics to show their progress, or lack of it.

Table 2: Sector-Specific Metrics for Financial Institution Disclosures
SectorKey Disclosure MetricWhat Good Looks LikeGreenwashing Red Flag
BankingFinanced emissions (PCAF standard)Absolute reduction in oil & gas portfolio emissions year over year.Showing green loans increasing, but total brown loans also increasing faster.
Asset ManagementPercentage of AUM aligned to Paris goalsClear methodology for alignment, with a yearly increase in the aligned percentage.Calling a fund "ESG integrated" while holding major coal developers.
InsuranceUnderwriting portfolio carbon intensityStopping insurance for new oil field exploration, and disclosing it publicly.Publishing a climate report but still insuring new coal plants without restrictions.
Key-Points
A Plan Needs Sharp Teeth, Not Just a Name

A credible transition plan has three parts: a clear starting line (baseline), short sprints (interim targets), and real money moving (capex shift).

If any of these three parts is missing or fuzzy, the risk of greenwashing is very high.

Sometimes companies say one thing but their money says another. We need to look at the flow of funds.

A bank published a glossy net zero report claiming it was a climate leader. The report was 60 pages long, full of pictures of windmills.

But a look at its bond portfolio showed it was the top underwriter for new Arctic oil drilling loans that same year. The pictures were nice, the money was dirty.

Detecting greenwashing means checking for specific gaps. Regulators in Europe and the UK are now setting rules to make these gaps obvious.

Table 3: Regulatory Approaches to Greenwashing Detection
RegulatorKey Rule/ToolPurposeDetection Focus
EU (ESMA)Fund names using ESG termsSets minimum thresholds (e.g., 80% sustainable investments) to use "ESG" in a fund name.Checks if the name matches the portfolio's actual holdings, not just a policy on paper.
UK (FCA)Sustainability Disclosure Requirements (SDR)Creates four labels for funds, stopping firms from making vague green claims.Audits the "intention" versus the "action"—ensuring a transition plan actually decarbonizes.
Global (ISSB)IFRS S2 Climate-related DisclosuresRequires companies to show how climate risks affect their financial planning.Looks for consistent metrics across reports, so investors can compare firms easily.

Checking a plan means looking at the right documents. You don't need to be a detective, just a careful reader.

Table 4: The Document Checklist for Verifying a Transition Plan
DocumentWhat to Look ForRed Flag If Missing
Annual Financial ReportClimate-related capex and R&D spending clearly separated.Sustainability mentioned only in the CEO letter, with no data in the numbers section.
Net Zero ReportA clear methodology for carbon offsets, with a plan to reduce reliance on them.Plan relies 95% on offsetting without showing how the core business will change.
Lobbying DisclosureA full list of trade association memberships, and if their climate stances align with the company.The company is a member of a group that actively lobbies against climate policy.
Executive Pay PlanA portion of long-term bonuses linked to specific, audited emission reduction milestones.ESG targets in pay are vague ("employee satisfaction," "diversity initiative") with no climate numbers.
Key-Points
Greenwashing Loves Good Stories, Hates Good Data

A company can spend millions on a beautiful sustainability website. But the real story is in the audited financial filings and lobbying records.

Always match the public pledge with the internal pay structure and external political actions.

It's common to see a firm claim "Paris-aligned" while still funding fossil fuel expansion. A simple checklist makes this contradiction obvious.

An airline announced a "net zero by 2050" plan using sustainable fuel. It sounded great.

But a simple check showed the airline had ordered 50 new long-haul jets that will burn massive amounts of fuel for 25 years. The plan didn't mention these new jets at all.

To make it all useful, we need a summary of what to watch for and what to do.

Key Takeaways

Key PointWhat It MeansAction Item
Plans need short-term targetsA 2050 goal without 2025 or 2030 steps is just a daydream.Demand to see the interim milestones and the budget attached to them.
Money talks louder than reportsCapex allocation is the most honest signal of a company's real direction.Compare the green capex growth rate to the brown capex growth rate.
Lobbying can cancel out a good planA firm's political actions often undermine its public climate claims.Read the company's lobbying audit or EUTPD report for alignment.
Offsets are not a magic wandPlans that rely mostly on offsets instead of emission cuts are suspect.Check the ratio of planned emission cuts versus offset purchases.