Ad industry helps to tackle climate change
Ad industry helps to tackle climate change

Ad industry helps to tackle climate change

Jo-Mare Duddy Booysen
Thin Lei Win - As shoppers scrambled for deals on Black Friday, spurred on by frenzied marketing campaigns, critics have called on advertisers to consider how the industry impacts climate change and to shift to a greener model.

Environmentally conscious consumers worldwide are trying to limit the excesses of Black Friday, when people spend billions of dollars on retail goods, and push to make it more sustainable.

Using the hashtags #TurnBlackFridayGreen and #ReclaimBlackFriday on social media, individuals on Friday suggested people shun e-commerce giants like Amazon and buy locally.

Yet while the spotlight may be on retailers, big advertising firms have "largely escaped accountability" despite indirectly fuelling global warming, according to a report by the New Weather Institute think-tank and its partners.

BIGGER PICTURE

Typically held the day after the US Thanksgiving public holiday, Black Friday has spread around the world.

Environmentalists say discount deals and special promotions synonymous with Black Friday encourage people to go on shopping binges and acquire things they do not need.

The result? Mountains of electronic waste that leak toxic chemicals into the soil, as well as planet-warming greenhouse gas emissions generated by fast fashion and transporting the products.

What does the report say?

That the advertising industry "indirectly contributes to climate and ecological degradation through its encouragement of materialistic values and goals, the consumption-driving work and spend cycle".

It says adverts lead people to place higher value on wealth and consumption which conflicts with caring about issues such as the environment, beyond the individual self.

The industry also indirectly causes emissions by promoting tobacco and beef, whose production has been linked to deforestation and pollution. Similarly, it encourages people to buy Sports Utility Vehicles and to fly for leisure, both powered by fossil fuels, the report added.

AD NET ZERO

Stephen Woodford, CEO of Britain's Advertising Association, said the industry recently launched an initiative, Ad Net Zero, to "reduce the carbon impact of the development, production and distribution of advertising to real net zero by end 2030".

"This includes the goal of encouraging advertisers and agencies to measure the carbon impact of their campaigns, direct and indirect, which is a good and proven first step towards reduction," he told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.

Banning advertising for certain sectors of the economy or restricting retail events like Black Friday "is not the answer," he said, adding that advertising can contribute to climate action by helping to promote more sustainable behaviour.

In the US too, 17 marketing and ad agencies have banded together to form a non-profit organisation called Potential Energy Coalition to raise awareness on climate change. – Nampa/Reuters

Kommentaar

Republikein 2024-04-20

Geen kommentaar is op hierdie artikel gelaat nie

Meld asseblief aan om kommentaar te lewer

LaLiga: Athletic Club 1 vs 1 Granada SerieA: Cagliari 2 vs 2 Juventus | Genoa 0 vs 1 SS Lazio Katima Mulilo: 16° | 35° Rundu: 16° | 34° Eenhana: 18° | 35° Oshakati: 20° | 34° Ruacana: 19° | 35° Tsumeb: 18° | 33° Otjiwarongo: 17° | 31° Omaruru: 17° | 33° Windhoek: 16° | 30° Gobabis: 17° | 31° Henties Bay: 17° | 24° Wind speed: 21km/h, Wind direction: S, Low tide: 07:53, High tide: 14:09, Low Tide: 19:53, High tide: 02:00 Swakopmund: 17° | 21° Wind speed: 23km/h, Wind direction: SW, Low tide: 07:51, High tide: 14:07, Low Tide: 19:51, High tide: 02:00 Walvis Bay: 19° | 27° Wind speed: 30km/h, Wind direction: SW, Low tide: 07:51, High tide: 14:06, Low Tide: 19:51, High tide: 02:00 Rehoboth: 18° | 32° Mariental: 21° | 34° Keetmanshoop: 23° | 34° Aranos: 20° | 34° Lüderitz: 18° | 31° Ariamsvlei: 23° | 37° Oranjemund: 16° | 27° Luanda: 26° | 29° Gaborone: 20° | 33° Lubumbashi: 15° | 26° Mbabane: 16° | 30° Maseru: 13° | 27° Antananarivo: 13° | 27° Lilongwe: 15° | 27° Maputo: 19° | 32° Windhoek: 16° | 30° Cape Town: 17° | 26° Durban: 19° | 26° Johannesburg: 18° | 29° Dar es Salaam: 24° | 29° Lusaka: 17° | 28° Harare: 14° | 29° #REF! #REF!