Current:Home > reviewsLawyers Challenge BP Over ‘Greenwashing’ Ad Campaign -Elevate Capital Network
Lawyers Challenge BP Over ‘Greenwashing’ Ad Campaign
View
Date:2025-04-13 01:33:27
Environmental lawyers have made their boldest move to date against “greenwashing” in advertising campaigns by oil and gas companies.
ClientEarth, a non-profit legal group, submitted an official complaint under international guidelines on Tuesday arguing that the oil giant BP is misleading consumers about its low-carbon credentials in recent advertisements—the company’s first global campaign in 10 years.
The ads, which emphasize BP’s role in the transition to cleaner energy, create a “potentially misleading impression” that distracts the public from their core business of hydrocarbons, ClientEarth said.
“BP is spending millions on an advertising campaign to give the impression that it’s racing to renewables, that its gas is cleaner and that it is part of the climate solution,” said Sophie Marjanac, a lawyer at ClientEarth. “This is a smokescreen.”
The complaint, submitted to the British authority that handles alleged breaches of rules on corporate conduct set by the OECD, the organization of leading world economies, focuses on the oil major’s “Keep Advancing” and “Possibilities Everywhere” advertising campaigns shown digitally and across billboards, newspapers and television in the UK, the United States and Europe.
If successful, the OECD could call upon BP to take down its ads or to issue a corrective statement.
Duncan Blake, director of brand at BP, told the Financial Times this year that the company sought to focus not just on the “new, interesting shiny stuff but the core business that keeps the world moving day to day.”
BP’s Message: More Energy, Lower Emissions
Critics have said the majority of the ads give the impression that BP is seeking to burnish its green credentials without any meaningful change to how it conducts its operations.
The energy major has invested in solar power, wind farms and biofuels and used its venture capital arm to plough cash into low-carbon technologies. But its traditional businesses still generate the biggest returns and attract the most spending.
“While BP’s advertising focuses on clean energy, in reality more than 96 percent of the company’s annual capital expenditure is on oil and gas,” Marjanac said.
BP in recent years has focused its messaging on the “dual challenge” of providing the world with more energy while reducing emissions.
The company said that it “strongly rejects” the suggestion that its advertising is misleading and that “one of the purposes of this advertising campaign is to let people know about some of the possibilities” to advance a low-carbon future.
Other Oil Majors’ Claims Also Challenged
It will be up to Bernard Looney, who is set to take over from Bob Dudley as chief executive of BP in early 2020, to spell out what this means for corporate strategy.
Other oil majors have also been challenged over misleading advertising. In September, the UK Advertising Standards Authority told Equinor, the Norwegian energy company, not to imply that gas is a “low-carbon energy” source.
To address “greenwashing” more broadly, ClientEarth said it was launching a campaign calling on the next UK government to require tobacco-style labels warning that fossil fuels contribute to climate change on all advertising by oil companies.
© The Financial Times Limited 2019. All Rights Reserved. Not to be further redistributed, copied or modified in any way.
veryGood! (1492)
Related
- Retirement planning: 3 crucial moves everyone should make before 2025
- When will the wildfire smoke clear? Here's what meteorologists say.
- Inside the Love Lives of The Summer I Turned Pretty Stars
- Women doctors are twice as likely to be called by their first names than male doctors
- Spooky or not? Some Choa Chu Kang residents say community garden resembles cemetery
- Do Hundreds of Other Gas Storage Sites Risk a Methane Leak Like California’s?
- Dolphins QB Tua Tagovailoa's injury sparks concern over the NFL's concussion policies
- Scripps Howard Awards Recognizes InsideClimate News for National Reporting on a Divided America
- Person accused of accosting Rep. Nancy Mace at Capitol pleads not guilty to assault charge
- Picking a good health insurance plan can be confusing. Here's what to keep in mind
Ranking
- Judge says Mexican ex-official tried to bribe inmates in a bid for new US drug trial
- Trump EPA Appoints Former Oil Executive to Head Its South-Central Region
- Ray Liotta's Cause of Death Revealed
- We'll Have 30 Secrets About When Harry Met Sally—And What She's Having
- 'As foretold in the prophecy': Elon Musk and internet react as Tesla stock hits $420 all
- Mystery client claims hiring detective to spy on Reno Mayor Hillary Schieve is part of American politics
- White woman who fatally shot Black neighbor through front door arrested on manslaughter and other charges
- California’s New Methane Rules Would Be the Nation’s Strongest
Recommendation
American news website Axios laying off dozens of employees
Today’s Climate: June 22, 2010
New Mexico’s Biggest Power Plant Sticks with Coal. Partly. For Now.
New Mexico’s Biggest Power Plant Sticks with Coal. Partly. For Now.
Romantasy reigns on spicy BookTok: Recommendations from the internet’s favorite genre
Climate Legal Paradox: Judges Issue Dueling Rulings for Cities Suing Fossil Fuel Companies
Matty Healy Joins Phoebe Bridgers Onstage as She Opens for Taylor Swift on Eras Tour
See it in photos: Smoke from Canadian wildfires engulfs NYC in hazy blanket