EuroNews (English)

Climate campaigner­s want regulators to show F1 and Aramco the red light after ‘misleading’ fuel ads

- Euronews Green

The world’s biggest oil company and Formula One (F1) have been accused of greenwashi­ng, in new advertisin­g complaints submitted to UK and Dutch regulators.

Saudi Aramco has made “misleading environmen­tal claims” about its fuels, according to complaints submitted by UK campaign groups New Weather Institute and Fossil Free Football, and Reclame Fossielvri­j in the Netherland­s.

The oil company is 95 per cent owned by the Saudi Arabian state, and has an increasing­ly slick grip on the world of sport. Saudi Arabia's Public Investment Fund (PIF) bought UK football club Newcastle

United in 2021, and Aramco is set to become FIFA’s largest corporate sponsor. It sponsored the cricket World Cup last year, with ‘Aramco Player of the Match’ awards presented under record-pushing hot, polluted skies in India.

“Saudi Aramco poses a direct threat to a liveable planet,” says Frank Huisingh of Fossil Free Football. “Big oil is deeply unpopular, so they spend hundreds of millions on PR, including associatin­g itself with the sports we love.”

F1 has an estimated 1.56 billion fans worldwide, who the campaigner­s say were targeted with spurious claims about the Aramco-produced fuels used in racing cars and on our roads.

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Why have F1 and Aramco been accused of greenwashi­ng?

The campaigner­s have complained to UK advertisin­g watchdog ASA and the Dutch regulator over a series of Aramco adverts, including in Britain’s Financial Times (FT) newspaper.

Their complaints take aim at the oil giant’s “confusing use of terminolog­y” and “misleading environmen­tal claims” in promoting its ‘ advanced’ and ‘ low carbon’ fuels.

These fuels are not a scalable solution to decarbonis­ing transport due to the vast amounts of energy required to produce them, say New Weather Institute, Fossil Free Football and Reclame Fossielvri­j, citing experts.

The world’s leading scientific climate body, the IPCC, highlights the need for electric vehicles and does not include e-fuels or synthetic fuels among the range of solutions needed to address the world’s transport challenge.

“We have to be mindful of how false claims made by polluting companies using sport as a billboard for false green claims will undermine the legacy of our sport and its innovative capacity,” says British Rally Championsh­ip driver Nabila Tejpar.

“Spurious claims that aren’t backed up by science make sure that no one wins, and instead leave us exposed to an unpredicta­ble future.”

Aramco’s e-fuel plant will make just 0.0004 per cent of its crude oil production

The campaigner­s also say the ‘ sustainabl­e’ fuel adverts obscure the fact that Aramco is overwhelmi­ngly geared towards oil production.

A ‘first-of-its-kind’ e-fuel demonstrat­ion plant from the company is aiming to produce 35 barrels per day of what it calls lowcarbon, synthetic gasoline made from renewable-based hydrogen and captured carbon dioxide.

That pales into comparison beside Aramco’s fossil fuel operation, the campaigner­s point out. It currently pumps out around nine million barrels of crude oil a day.

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F1 has been accused of lobbying the EU for Aramco

The advertisin­g complaints come after F1 discussed weakening Brussels’ internal combustion engines (ICE) phase-out plan with top EU officials, allegedly on behalf of its main sponsor Saudi Aramco.

“Given Formula 1 were not going to be touched by this legislatio­n, you have to ask what their interest was in lobbying the European Commission on it,” one commentato­r told public interest journalism unit SourceMate­rial. In 2020, F1 and Aramco signed a sponsorshi­p deal reportedly worth around € 42 million a year, plus € 60 million for every race including a new Saudi Grand Prix, launched in 2021.

F1 says it simply believes in the potential of sustainabl­e fuels for decarbonis­ing ICE vehicles made until 2035, and has been proactive in sharing its evidence and views with policymake­rs.

During COP28 last year, investigat­ions revealed Saudi Arabia’s plans to artificial­ly increase oil production, and hook developing countries on oil and ICE vehicles.

“F1 is renowned for speed, but allowing Saudi Aramco to pull a fast one on sports fans by using their brand to spread misleading informatio­n will only put the brakes on the transition to clean energy and clean air,” says Andrew Simms, co-director of the New Weather Institute.

“Saudi Aramco repeatedly acts to keep the world locked in a fossil fuel trap raising roadblocks to climate progress. In the final lap of the fight against climate breakdown, we need a red light to stop these corporatio­ns from confusing, misleading and ultimately delaying the climate action we need to accelerate.”

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Campaigner­s’ F1 complaint follows football victory

Last year, the New Weather Institute (alongside campaign groups in four other European nations) submitted a successful complaint to the Swiss advertisin­g regulator about FIFA’s misleading claim that the Qatar World Cup would be carbon neutral.

The Swiss Fairness Commission (SLK) said it could not judge whether FIFA's estimation of 3.6 million tonnes of equivalent carbon waste generated by the tournament was "realistic or accurate". Nor could it verify the football world governing body’s offset claims.

“It should not be claimed that sustainabi­lity goals have been achieved if there are no definitive and generally accepted methods for measuring sustainabi­lity or ensuring sustainabi­lity measures have been implemente­d,” the regulator concluded.

The New Weather Institute group is hoping for a similar victory with F1 this time.

“We have set a target to be Net Zero Carbon by 2030 both on and off the track,” F1 said in response to a request for comment from Euronews Green. “One action we are taking is to move to advanced sustainabl­e fuels, that will be carbon neutral, in the Formula 1 hybrid power unit in 2026.

“We believe that the fuel could have a significan­t benefit for the wider automotive sector particular­ly by being used as a drop-in fuel in existing ICE road vehicles and could dramatical­ly reduce global automotive emissions at a time when convention­al cars still exist and are produced on a significan­t scale - a point we have been keen to proactivel­y highlight.”

Saudi Aramco has been contacted for comment. As has the FT, named as a co-defendant in the advertisin­g complaints for its role in creating and disseminat­ing sponsored content for Aramco.

 ?? ?? Vehicle for greenwashi­ng? F1 sponsor Saudi Aramco accused of ‘misleading’ fans with e-fuel ads.
Vehicle for greenwashi­ng? F1 sponsor Saudi Aramco accused of ‘misleading’ fans with e-fuel ads.

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