Mia Hartwell - The High Price of Greenhushing and the Health-Planet Link
In Part 1, food marketing and sustainability consultant Mia Hartwell outlined the sheer scale of the food industry's environmental footprint. But knowing a problem exists is very different from marketing a solution, especially at a time when consumers are feeling an intense financial squeeze.
Next, we dive into the balancing act facing food marketers: managing short-term cost pressures while building long-term consumer trust.
The Cost-of-Living Dilemma vs. Long-Term Resilience
Right now, food marketers are operating in a pressure cooker. Prices are soaring, supply chains are volatile, and consumers are hyper-focused on their immediate household budgets. In this climate, dedicating resources to sustainability can easily feel like a luxury a brand cannot afford.
Mia argues that this short-term view is incredibly dangerous:
"Without creating sustainable products right now, we simply will not have a business model in the long term," she warns. "If the climate crisis keeps accelerating, the ingredients will not be there to put on the table. Sustainability is not an environmental add-on; it is foundational business resilience."
The challenge is unlocking the commercial value of that resilience today. According to Mia, the secret lies in building a protective moat of consumer trust, an asset many brands are currently leaving on the table due to fear.
The High Cost of Staying Silent (Greenhushing)
With the regulatory crackdown on greenwashing, many brands have chosen to enter a phase of "greenhushing", doing good work behind the scenes but staying completely silent in their marketing out of fear of getting things wrong. Mia views this as a massive missed opportunity.
Marketers frequently point to the "say-do gap," noting that while consumers say they care about the environment, they rarely pay a premium for green products at the checkout counter. Mia explains that this is not because consumers do not care; it is because they view sustainability as a baseline requirement:
"Consumers expect you to be getting on with it. They are not paying more for sustainability because they assume you should already be doing it. If you are silent, they will assume you are doing nothing, and that opens up an immediate space for distrust."
If a brand is proactive and transparent about its eco-journey, it builds a reserve of goodwill. If a supply chain crisis hits later down the road, a trusted brand survives; a silent, disconnected brand gets punished by the market.
The Convergence of Health and Planet
For brands wondering how to start communicating these complex ideas without alienating budget-conscious shoppers, Mia points to an accelerating trend: the intersection of human health and planetary health.
Consumers naturally connect "good for me" with "good for the planet."
"Brands that are already talking about health, whether it is boosting fibre, clean protein, or hitting your weekly 'plant points', are in the best position to talk about sustainability," Mia explains.
By framing sustainability through immediate consumer benefits like taste, health, and freshness, environmental initiatives stop feeling preachy and start feeling desirable. This is exactly where concepts like regenerative agriculture are gaining mainstream traction, connecting the consumer directly back to the health of the soil their food was grown in.
In our third and final part, we will look at how to avoid "carbon tunnel vision" in food reporting, and analyse three brilliant food brands that are turning sustainability into a premium, aspirational asset.










