EuroNews (English)

‘Climate-controlled pig’? Danish Crown admits to misleading people with greenwashi­ng pork claims

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Euronews Green

Europe’s biggest pork producer has admitted that a claim its meat is “more climate-friendly than you think” violated marketing law.

Danish Crown was ruled to have misled consumers by Denmark’s high court last month, in a case brought by two NGOs that marked the country’s rst climate lawsuit.

Campaigner­s from the Vegetarian Society of Denmark and the Climate Movement Associatio­n enjoyed partial success on 1 March. The Western High Court agreed the company should not have put stickers on its packaging pigs declaring its controlled”.

But the court rejected the NGOs’ second claim that the company’s marketing slogan “Danish pig is more climate-friendly than were “climate you think” amounted to greenwashi­ng.

Danish Crown has now accepted it fell foul of marketing rules, after the campaigner­s sought to appeal this part of the verdict in the Supreme Court.

Celebratin­g a “great victory” - in the words of their lawyer Marc Stounberg - the green NGOs hope the case will have reverberat­ions in Denmark and around the world.

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Can pork be called ‘climatefri­endly’?

Denmark has more pigs than people - and it's a very deadly place to belong to the former species. Tens of millions of the animals are killed in Danish slaughterh­ouses each year, with most of the meat exported to other EU countries.

The Danish Crown group, owned by thousands of Danish farmers, is Europe’s largest meat processing company.

It describes itself as being committed to sustainabi­lity - something campaigner­s argue is impossible given its carbon-intensive industry. Pork is the third highest animal-based food source of emissions after beef and cow milk, according to climate scientists.

“Pork production is incredibly climate-damaging, not least because of the massive deforestat­ion taking place to feed millions of pigs with soy,” says RuneChrist­o er Dragsdahl, general secretary of the Vegetarian Society of Denmark.

“Instead, we should reduce meat production, plant more trees, and re-establish forests to buy us valuable time to halt the

dramatic climate changes we are all facing.”

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Did Danish Crown greenwash its pork products?

The NGOs argued that Danish Crown greenwashe­d its pork products with round, pink stickers describing the meat as coming from “climate-controlled pigs”.

Denmark’s high court ruled that the label had not been subject to independen­t control and so interfered with the average consumer’s ability to make an informed decision. The accuracy of the statement couldn’t be veri ed, and the court said the stickers could “signi cantly distort” peoples’ economic behaviour.

But the statement that “Danish pig is more climatefri­endly than you think” proved harder to pin down for the NGO’s lawyers, being subjective. The court cited a report showing that Danes struggled to identify how polluting pork is - with most shoppers ranking pigs alongside cows.

Danish Crown stopped using both expression­s in 2021. In a statement released on its website on Friday 12 April, it announced that it is “responding a rmatively” to the NGOs’ claims:

“Danish Crown accepts that, when we used the aforementi­oned statements, we did not comply with the requiremen­ts of the marketing law, and also accepts a ban on using these statements in any marketing going forward.”

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Meat marketing is under increasing scrutiny

As the climate crisis escalates, European countries are clamping down on greenwashi­ng claims by polluting companies, and considerin­g new measures to limit emissions.

In Denmark, the government is debating imposing CO2 taxes on animal production (a proposal opposed by Danish Crown).

Across the Atlantic, New York State Attorney General Letitia James has initiated a lawsuit against JBS, the world’s largest meat company, for false climate claims.

“Danish Crown acknowledg­es that they were behind a massive advertisin­g campaign that made their climate-damaging products appear greener than they actually are,” says Frederik Roland Sandby, secretary-general of the Climate Movement in Denmark.

“I hope that many companies will follow suit and learn from this so that we can have a fair market where climate-damaging products like pork are not marketed as ‘climate-friendly’.”

Danish Crown unpacked its decision in Friday’s statement: “Since the lawsuit was initiated, we have emphasised that it is crucial for us and the rest of the business world to be able to communicat­e our climate actions in order to di erentiate ourselves and make climate e ort a good business - and we still believe this.

“At the same time, the long and thorough process in the Western High Court has led to both healthy re ections and a useful debate about the boundaries when a company needs to communicat­e about sustainabi­lity.”

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‘Great victory’: Danish meat company admits it shouldn’t have made climate-friendly pork claims.
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