Stop fossil fuel propanda
Should fossil fuel ads appear on our television screens? UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres says no.
During a special address, Guterres called for an advertising ban on fossil fuel companies. “I urge every country to ban advertising from fossil fuel companies,” he said. “And I urge news media and tech companies to stop taking fossil fuel advertising.”
Guterres
also urged advertising and public relations companies to “stop taking on new
fossil fuel clients, from today, and set out plans to drop your existing ones.”
“Many in the fossil fuel industry have shamelessly
greenwashed, even as they have sought to delay climate action – with lobbying,
legal threats, and massive ad campaigns. Fossil fuels are not only poisoning
our planet – they’re toxic for your brand.” UN Secretary-General Antonio
Guterres
A handful of cities and one country have fossil fuel ad
bans. In 2021, Amsterdam became the first city in the world to ban ads from
fossil fuel companies. France became the first country to ban certain fossil
fuel ads a year later. The same year, Sydney became the second city to ban
fossil fuel ads.
Fossil Fuel Ads and Spreading Climate Misinformation
A three-year Congressional investigation found fossil
fuel companies “deceive the public and investors about their knowledge of the
effects of their products on climate change and to undermine efforts to curb
greenhouse gas emissions.” In a report published
this year, the investigation focused on ExxonMobil Corporation (Exxon), Chevron
Corporation (Chevron), Shell USA Inc. (Shell), BP America Inc. (BP), the
American Petroleum Institute (AI), and the Chamber of Commerce (the Chamber).
Internal documents obtained by the Senate Budget
Committee revealed that fossil fuel companies knew for over 60 years that
burning fossil fuels causes climate change. However, those companies practiced
climate denial, as reported by Inside Climate and the New York Times. In 2015,
an Exxon communications advisor wrote in an email that the company didn’t
“actually… dispute much of what these stories report.” In other words, the
company internally acknowledged its climate denial.
Not only did fossil fuel companies practice climate
denial, but they also spread misinformation. In 1998, the George C.
Marshall Institute, funded by ExxonMobil, co-published the Oregon
Petition, which urged the federal government to “reject the global
warming agreement that was written in Kyoto, Japan.” The petition questioned
the consensus around climate change. In 2001, ExxonMobil published an ad titled
“An energy policy for the new
administration.” The ad urged that “the unrealistic and economically
damaging Kyoto process needs to be rethought.”
Fossil fuel companies use trade associations and think
tanks to spread misinformation about climate change and
lobby against climate action. After ExxonMobil joined the Oil and Gas Climate
Initiative (OGCI), a misleading name if ever there was one, provided “critical
edits” for materials that referred to the Paris Agreement and language that
“potentially commits members to enhanced climate-related governance, strategy,
risk management, and performance metrics and targets.” Exxon also produced the
National Petroleum Council’s (NPC) “Topic Paper #1, Role of Natural Gas in a
Low-Carbon Economy.”
Painting It Green
The fossil fuel industry promotes natural gas as a
“safer” fuel. In 2017, an email from BP America, Inc. stated that “promoting
and protecting the role of gas as an increasing part of our energy mix is a
paramount priority. We need to be ready to speak to this wherever there is a
credible effort to disincentivize gas.” A print ad by the American Petroleum
Institute gushed about natural gas: “Natural gas doesn’t just cook dinner.
Thanks to natural gas, the air up here is cleaner than it’s been in 25 years.”
Researchers looked at data from Chevron,
ExxonMobil, BP, and Shell from 2009 to 2020 and found that they frequently
mention “climate,” “low-carbon,” and “transition,” particularly BP and Shell.
They found similar results for decarbonization and clean energy but also
discovered that the companies use “pledges rather than concrete actions.” A
year later, a study showed that
Shell, ExxonMobil, BP, and TotalEnergies link natural gas to renewables and
promote it as part of their climate strategy.
Fossil fuel ads only serve as a platform to mislead and
greenwash consumers, delay climate action, and line the pockets of the fossil
fuel industry.