Ad watchdog cracks down on oil giants Shell and Petronas’ ‘greenwashing’ campaigns
he advert watchdog has clamped down on ‘greenwashing’, ruling that adverts oil giants Shell and Petronas misled customers by highlighting their renewables arms in adverts with out revealing the “overall environmental impact of their business”.
The Advertising Standards Authority dominated that oil giants Shell breached its code round deceptive adverts with a poster and tv advert that spotlight the variety of households that “use 100% renewable electricity from Shell”. The tv advert additionally talked about Shell’s electrical automobile chargers and a “wind project”.
Petronas, in the meantime, breached the code over an advert the place it mentioned it labored to “reduce emissions, grow renewable energy, bring education to more, champion social impact and promote a circular economy, as well as achieve net zero carbon emissions by 2050”.
Campaign group Adfree Cities – which describes itself as a “network of groups… concerned about the impacts of corporate advertising on our health, wellbeing, environment climate, communities and the local economy” – raised a grievance in regards to the Shell advert to the ASA.
Adfree Cities mentioned that by omitting details about the general environmental influence of Shell’s enterprise, the advert was deceptive. As one of many world’s largest oil corporations, Shell’s operations estimated to be accountable for roughly one sixtieth of world greenhouse fuel emissions, making it one of many world’s ten largest polluters.
Shell, although, mentioned the advert was solely meant to focus on the renewables arm of its enterprise, and was not supposed to recommend it wasn’t additionally concerned in much less clear types of power.
“Consumers would already be well-informed regarding that aspect of their operations and, in fact, would primarily associate their brand with the sale of petrol,” the corporate mentioned.
It pointed to market analysis that confirmed a big degree of consciousness of Shell’s petrol enterprise in comparison with a lot decrease familiarity for its renewables work, and mentioned it aimed to “bridge that gap”.
However, the ASA upheld the grievance. It mentioned that whereas viewers wouldn’t suppose Shell had no involvement in fossil fuels, they could be seeking to hunt down power corporations which can be “making meaningful progress towards transitioning away from higher-carbon products and services”.
“However, they were unlikely to be aware of the details of this in relation to specific companies, and ads were therefore likely to mislead consumers if they misrepresented the contribution that lower-carbon initiatives played, or would play in the near future, as part of the overall balance of a company’s activities,” the watchdog mentioned.
It dominated that the advert would “give the impression that low-carbon energy products comprised a significant proportion of the energy products Shell invested in and sold in the UK in 2022”, when this was not the case.
As a end result, it mentioned that details about the proportion of Shell’s enterprise that was associated to scrub power ought to have been included, and the absence of those information made the advert deceptive.
Veronica Wignall, a campaigner from Adfree Cities, mentioned the ruling was a landmark that might forestall oil giants from operating “greenwashing” campaigns.
“Today’s official ban on Shell’s adverts marks the end of the line for fossil fuel greenwashing in the UK” she mentioned. “The world’s biggest polluters will not be permitted to advertise that they are ‘green’ while they build new pipelines, refineries and rigs.”
Wignall advised the Standard that the group would proceed to work till all fossil gas adverts have been banned, and mentioned the following step can be adverts for electrical autos.
“The whole car industry has moved their advertising over to electric vehicles, but they are still huge sellers of petrol cars,” she mentioned. “And even electric vehicles rely on energy from the grid, and the grid right now is not clean.”
“There are people making these adverts. Ad agencies are going to face more regulatory complaints and legal complaints.”
The ASA then itself challenged an advert from Malaysian oil big Petronas, as “part of a wider piece of work on environmental claims in the Energy sector”.
Again, it mentioned the advert omitted details about the true influence of the oil firm’s enterprise.