The Guardian (USA)

Lufthansa’s ‘green’ adverts banned in UK for misleading consumers

- Mark Sweney

An ad campaign by Lufthansa claiming that its green initiative­s were protecting the world has been banned by the UK advertisin­g watchdog, which ruled it was misleading consumers over the environmen­tal impact of flying.

The Advertisin­g Standards Authority (ASA) launched an investigat­ion into the campaign – which featured a plane with an image of the Earth on its underside and the strapline: “Connecting the world. Protecting its future” – over concerns the German airline was giving consumers a “misleading impression of its environmen­tal impact”.

Lufthansa said the tag line was “open to interpreta­tion” and consumers would not see it as an “absolute promise” relating to the environmen­t or that its planes did not cause harm.

It said the purpose of the poster campaign, which contained a link to its Make Change Fly environmen­tal campaign website, was to address the need to reduce the impact of flying and making people aware of what Lufthansa is doing.

Lufthansa told the ASA that its environmen­tal claims were based on aspiration­s, including becoming carbon neutral by 2050 and halving carbon emissions by 2030.

However, the ASA said consumers would view the ad as a claim that Lufthansa had already taken “significan­t mitigating steps” to ensure that the net environmen­tal impact of its business was not harmful.

“Many of these initiative­s [are] targeted to deliver results only years or decades into the future,” the ASA said. “We also understood that there were currently no environmen­tal initiative­s or commercial­ly viable technologi­es in the aviation industry which would substantia­te the absolute green claim ‘protecting its future’, as we considered consumers would interpret it.”

The ASA banned the ad campaign, telling Lufthansa to make clearer and better substantia­ted environmen­tal claims in the future and to not give a misleading impression of the impact caused by flying with the airline.

“Climate change and the environmen­t is the key and enduring issue of our age,” Miles Lockwood, the director of complaints and investigat­ions at the ASA, said. “Advertiser­s in high carbon emitting sectors shouldn’t make claims that give consumers a misleading impression about their green credential­s and plans or which they can’t substantia­te with robust evidence.”

Lufthansa is the latest big brand to be called out by the ASA after a promise the watchdog made in September 2021 to crack down on unsubstant­iated or misleading green claims by firms.

Last year, the ASA banned ad campaigns on the grounds of misleading environmen­tal or green claims by companies including the alt-milk brand Oatley, the Pepsi-owned tea brand Lipton, and Unilever’s Persil detergent.

Others brands that have faced ASA bans in recent years include Ryanair, HSBC and the energy companies Esso and Shell.

 ?? Photograph: Urbanandsp­ort/NurPhoto/Rex/Shuttersto­ck ?? A Lufthansa Boeing 747. The airline said it aimed to become carbon neutral by 2050 and halve carbon emissions by 2030.
Photograph: Urbanandsp­ort/NurPhoto/Rex/Shuttersto­ck A Lufthansa Boeing 747. The airline said it aimed to become carbon neutral by 2050 and halve carbon emissions by 2030.
 ?? Photograph: ASA ?? Lufthansa said its Make Change Fly poster aimed to people aware of what the airline is doing.
Photograph: ASA Lufthansa said its Make Change Fly poster aimed to people aware of what the airline is doing.

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