"Shell is one of the world's dirtiest companies. People living next door to Shell's refineries around the world can vouch for that. Shell should spend money cleaning up its mess, not on deceiving the public with expensive, dishonest adverts. We hope that the advertising standard authorities will take immediate action to withdraw the advert and order Shell to air a correction to the audiences reached with the misleading advert."
The Dutch Advertising Authority confirmed that this was a misrepresentation, since only a tiny proportion of Shell’s total carbon dioxide emissions is piped into greenhouses. Friends of the Earth Netherlands / Milieudefensie was informed of this on July 4th.Anne van Schaik, campaign leader of the Globalisation Department at Friends of the Earth Netherlands / Milieudefensie said: 'Instead of greenwashing its environmental behaviour, Shell should tackle its real problems. For instance, in Nigeria, gas flaring by Shell causes 60 times more greenhouse gas emissions than the carbon dioxide that is reused by Dutch farmers to grow flowers.” Shell also claimed in the advert that it uses its `waste sulphur to make concrete'.
The Dutch Advertising Authority also qualified this claim as misleading because this could be interpreted as applying to all of the waste sulphur generated by Shell. In reality, a major part of Shell's sulphur waste is used for fuel for sea ships and is finally released in the air. Sea ships are one of the biggest sources of sulphur dioxide pollution.The Shell advertisement appeared in several western European countries. In England and Belgium, Friends of the Earth filed similar complaints. In England the case is still pending, but in Belgium the claim was rejected by the Advertisement Authority.
Paul de Clerck, head of the Corporates campaign of Friends of the Earth International said: “In the advertisement Shell used strongly misleading environmental claims.
The fact that the Belgium Advertisement Authority didn’t see any problems clearly underlines the need for strict European-wide rules to prevent greenwashing advertisements by multinational companies such as Shell.
”For more information contact:Paul de Clerck, head of the Corporates campaign of Friends of the Earth International, tel: +32-494-380959 (Belgian mobile number)
Anne van Schaik, campaign leader of the Globalisation Department at Friends of the Earth Netherlands / Milieudefensie, tel: +31-6-29593877
Read how the organisation 'Friends of the Earth' complains against Shell's GREENWASHING campaign here.
You can find the GREENWASHING campaign here.
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