The Guardian (USA)

‘A great deception’: oil giants taken to task over ‘greenwash’ ads

- Damian Carrington Environmen­t editor

Some of the world’s biggest fossil fuel companies have used advertisin­g to “greenwash” their ongoing contributi­on to the climate crisis, according to files published by the environmen­tal lawyers ClientEart­h. They describe the practice as “a great deception”.

The files compare the adverts produced by ExxonMobil, Aramco, Chevron, Shell, Equinor and others with the companies’ operations and products, overall climate impact and progress toward climate-safe business models.

ClientEart­h is calling on policymake­rs to ban all fossil fuel company ads unless they come with tobaccosty­le health warnings about the risks of global heating to people and the planet.

Its lawyers lodged a complaint in 2019 alleging that BP’s advertisin­g campaigns had misled the public by focusing on the company’s low carbon energy products, when more than 96% of its annual spend was on oil and gas. BP withdrew the ads before the complaint was assessed. ClientEart­h said it was now putting other fossil fuel companies on notice over greenwashi­ng adverts.

“We’re currently witnessing a great deception, where the companies most responsibl­e for catastroph­ically heating the planet are spending millions on advertisin­g campaigns about how their business plans are focused on sustainabi­lity,” said Johnny White, one of ClientEart­h’s lawyers.

“We need to reduce reliance on fossil fuels, but instead of leading a lowcarbon transition these companies are putting out advertisin­g which distracts the public and launders their image. Our research shows these adverts are misreprese­nting the true nature of companies’ businesses, of their contributi­on to climate change, and of their transition plans.”

ClientEart­h’s claims that:

ExxonMobil advertisin­g suggested its experiment­al algae biofuels could one day reduce transport emissions, while it has no company-wide net zero target and its 2025 emission reduction targets do not include the vast majority of emissions resulting from its products. analysis includes Saudi Arabia’s Aramco said it conducted business “in a way that addresses the climate challenge” yet it is the world’s largest corporate greenhouse gas emitter and plans to continue exploring for more oil and gas, despite having reserves greater than those of Exxon, Chevron, Shell, BP and Total combined.

Chevron said it was “part of the solution” to climate change but does not have a net zero commitment or a strategy aligned with the Paris climate agreement. Its plans for carbon capture and storage cover less than 1% of its 2019 carbon emissions.

Shell said it was investing in “lowercarbo­n biofuels and hydrogen, electric vehicle charging, solar and wind power”, but in 2020 it earmarked between $2bn and $3bn a year for lowcarbon businesses, compared to $17bn on fossil fuels operations.

Norway’s Equinor has talked of growing renewable capacity tenfold by 2026, but renewables are only planned to be 4% of its energy by that date.

ClientEart­h said warnings on oil company adverts should state that fossil fuel products are the main cause of global heating and that companies must divulge how much they are spending on fossil fuels compared with their low-carbon businesses.

There are numerous campaigns in Europe and North America to ban fossil fuel advertisin­g. The French parliament proposed a law in February to ban ads for fossil fuel products, and a Dutch law professor published a paper arguing that fossil fuel advertisin­g is inherently harmful and misleading and should be banned.

A Shell spokespers­on said: “Our target is to become a net-zero emissions energy business by 2050, in step with society’s progress towards the goal of the Paris agreement on climate change. Our short, medium and long term intensity and absolute targets are fully consistent with the more ambitious 1.5C goal of the Paris agreement. And our targets cover the full range of our own emissions and our customers emissions.”

A Chevron spokesman rejected ClientEart­h’s analysis. He said: “We engage in honest conversati­ons about the energy transition. We believe the future of energy is lower carbon and are working to help the world achieve that goal. We are taking action to reduce the carbon intensity of our operations and assets, increase the use of renewables and offsets and invest in low-carbon technologi­es.”

ExxonMobil, Aramco and Equinor did not respond to a request for comment.

The Guardian announced in January 2020 that it would no longer accept advertisin­g from oil and gas companies.

 ??  ?? A Chevron oil refinery. ClientEart­h say the firm’s plans for carbon capture and storage cover less than 1% of its 2019 carbon emissions. Photograph: Chuck Nacke/Alamy
A Chevron oil refinery. ClientEart­h say the firm’s plans for carbon capture and storage cover less than 1% of its 2019 carbon emissions. Photograph: Chuck Nacke/Alamy

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