The Business Case for Climate Disinformation
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Two Economies With the Same Interest
During the May 2026 heatwave, a familiar set of claims circulated across European platforms. Heatwaves are natural. Scientists manipulate data. The media exaggerates. A June 2026 report from the European Digital Media Observatory documents the pattern: climate disinformation spikes during extreme weather, and the narratives are recycled, not improvised.
Two overlapping economies sustain the system. The carbon economy funds misleading content to protect commercial interests. The attention economy’s algorithms reward inflammatory material because engagement generates revenue. Neither is coordinating with the other. Their incentives converge.
“It’s spreading at the speed of light,” Sara said. Accurate climate communication travels in the same environment. It is not rewarded by the same algorithm.
From PR to a PhD in What Goes Wrong
Sara built her career across public relations, international development, and corporate sustainability consulting before arriving at the structural question of why so much communications work fails. A PhD in sustainability communication at Universidade do Minho, completed in 2024, produced the CARE model: a peer-reviewed audit framework covering Content, Aim, Reporting, and Engagement.
More than five years at EY followed, advising Portuguese companies on ESG strategy, materiality, and disclosure. The consulting work confirmed what the research had found.
“There are companies doing greenwashing on purpose,” she said, “and others that are caught in the trap and do it because of their lack of knowledge.”
She is now Managing Director of BeTrue, a sustainability communications agency, and founder of Mossy, an AI-powered greenwashing detection tool launched in June 2026 and built on the CARE model.
A Machine Built in the Fifties
The EDMO report traces the organised suppression of climate knowledge to at least the 1960s, when fossil fuel companies had internal evidence of the impact of their products and chose not to disclose it. Sara notes the connection was identified even earlier, around 1912.
Why does the suppression continue, given that those funding it have descendants who will inherit the consequences? “Power and money. Because they think they can buy their exit out of this crisis with money.”
The modern architecture adds a layer the fossil fuel industry did not design. Russia maintains a developed climate disinformation strategy targeting the EU. State actors and commercial actors share no coordination mechanism. They share a common interest in delay and confusion.
The CARE Model and the Gap It Measures
Sara’s doctoral research at Universidade do Minho produced the CARE model: a peer-reviewed framework for auditing sustainability communication across four dimensions, Content, Aim, Reporting, and Engagement.
At BeTrue, she applies it with sustainability and communications teams to close the gap between what organisations do and what stakeholders actually understand and trust. As CSRD raises the bar on disclosure, that gap is becoming harder and more costly to ignore. The penalty for miscommunication is no longer reputational alone. It is regulatory.
“There are companies doing greenwashing on purpose,” she said, “and others that are caught in the trap and do it because of their lack of knowledge.”
The work operates at the communicator end of the information supply chain. It helps organisations say things that are accurate, proportionate, and defensible. It does not change what the algorithm amplifies. A company that communicates accurately and one that communicates misleadingly compete in the same attention environment. The incentive structure governing which content travels further has not changed.
The Variable Upstream of All of It
The EDMO report describes the goal of disinformation as white noise: not persuasion, but exhaustion. Enough misleading content surrounding the signal makes the signal impossible to locate.
Sara’s counter moves upstream from communication entirely. “From the past two hundred years there was a decrease in sixty percent of our connection to nature.”
People disconnected from direct ecological experience are more susceptible to narratives that deny it. Her argument for nature-based education and local community engagement is not peripheral to the disinformation question. It is, in her reading, the underlying variable.
Her magic wand is a shift in consciousness: the ability to see how much daily purchasing is manufactured by advertising rather than need.
“I would give people the ability to see the reality of the world we are living in and the way they would recognise how many of the things that we buy every day are unnecessary, useless, and how companies deceive and mislead us.”
The incentive structure making disinformation commercially rational remains intact. That is the condition in which better sustainability communication is being attempted.
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