Nikita Mishra
Sep 20, 2022

239 agencies listed as 'polluted' in Australia: report

Climate advocacy groups Clean Creatives and Comms Declare have revealed this year's version of the F-List, a list of agencies that work alongside oil, coal, and gas companies.

(Shutterstock)
(Shutterstock)

First launched in 2021, the F-List from Clean Creatives and Australia-based climate advocacy group Comms Declare is a comprehensive list of agencies with fossil fuel clients on their books. The second edition of the annual list dropped today and it names 239 agencies, representing all the major eight holding companies, working alongside oil, gas and coal companies.

This year's list, which can be seen here, includes Edelman, Big Red, UM, AKQA, Wunderman Thompson, BBDO, OMD, Dentsu, McCann, Weber Shandwick, Havas Media, MSL, Digitas, MediaMonks, Forsman & Bodenfors, and many more. 

Following last year’s report, the F-List 2022 focuses on Latin America and the Asia-Pacific regions. It evaluates sustainability statements from agencies and compares them with the records of their clients. The report also reveals agencies actively under contract with the fossil fuel industry to aid them in covert attempts to greenwash.

In the investigation process, Clean Creatives found that most agencies had no references to fossil fuel clients on their front end—websites, banners, marketing materials among others. And despite the sustainability commitments and net-zero pledges most have made, the research teams used web archives to uncover links with Big Oil.

Announced from New York, where group heads, sustainability groups, non-profits and big corporates have convened for Climate Week, Clean Creatives‘ report charts over 15 years of activism urging PR and advertising agencies to break up with Big Oil clients.

Talking about the rising extreme weather conditions around the world and the current destruction in Puerto Rico as hurricane Fiona rips through the country, Duncan Meisel, executive director at Clean Creatives, warns that the time for half-measure is over: “Advertising and PR companies have had decades of warnings that their relationships with fossil fuel companies are harming their reputation, and their clean clients. Until now, executives have chosen to ignore those warnings, with serious consequences for the planet, and their ability to attract and retain young talent.”

He adds: “Hundreds of agencies have pledged not to work with fossil fuels because working with polluters is bad for business, and bad for the planet.”

Within the ad industry, the movement to ditch Big Oil is growing. Mustache, a New York-based midsize agency owned by Cognizant, signed a pledge in 2021 to snap ties with any fossil fuel clients. The firm has publicly announced they will not be budged even if Shell comes up with a US$1 million contract. 

Recently, France become the first European country to ban advertisements for fossil fuels. The ban implies that there will be no longer be any promotion of petroleum-based energy products, energy from the combustion of coal, and hydrogen-containing carbons in France. Elsewhere in Europe, Amsterdam has banned ads for fossil fuels, air travel, and foreign holidays. Pursuing similar strategies is the city of Sydney, Australia, they are the the first urban center in APAC to pledge a ban on all kinds of fossil fuel advertising.  

To divert the attention of Climate Week attendees, Clean Creatives has installed posters around Manhattan that highlight the ties between major advertising and PR agencies and their fossil fuel clients. Key findings from this year’s F-List below:

The highlights:

  • 239 agencies have done recent work with fossil fuel companies. The vast majority of this work is not shared via agency channels, or with clients whose work may be affected by greenwashing claims. 
  • At least 17 agencies are working for Saudi Aramco, the world’s largest polluter, including a previously undisclosed Interpublic Mediabrands agency, Well7. Interpublic agencies McCann, UM, and Jack Morton have also led substantial work for Aramco, but all holding companies have some connection to the world’s largest oil company, and funder of human rights abuses. 
  • Edelman retains its role as the independent agency doing the most work for fossil fuel companies, despite a pledge in early 2022 to review its client policy. Some small signs of progress at the PR giant can be seen, but the company remains committed to working with polluters.

Coal giant Glencore has been called out for its PR blitz—their campaigns trumpet EVs, solar panels and wind turbines—with no mention of Glencore’s primary business: coal. Comms Declare says that Bastion Creative is behind the campaign. This complaint follows the barring of two employees of Anacta Strategies from lobbying the Queensland government. Glencore secured a lucrative bailout while employing Anacta.

Belinda Noble, founder of Comms Declare, says, “At least nine Australian advertising and PR agencies are helping coal giant Glencore portray itself as part of a clean energy future while the company is actually expanding coal operations. Agency executives need to wake up and realise they are actively helping the corporations creating global warming, which is generating unprecedented disasters around the globe.”

Source:
Campaign Asia

Related Articles

Just Published

36 minutes ago

João Braga joins Publicis Groupe Hong Kong as ...

Starting in November, the former CCO of Wunderman Thompson Australia joined Publicis Hong Kong.

56 minutes ago

How marketing helped Chinese apps and games to ...

Campaign explores the factors that have propelled Chinese apps and games—such as Black Myyth: Wukong, Temu, Shein, and TikTok—to international success, and the insights marketers can leverage from their success stories.

1 hour ago

Jaguar defends rebrand amid ‘vile hatred’ online

Jaguar could be facing its own Bud Light moment. However, Jaguar's boss has defended the “bold” rebranding, saying the message had been lost in “a blaze of intolerance” online.

1 hour ago

Creative Minds: Nutthida Patthanhatirat thrives on ...

This art director’s journey spans from Photoshop struggles to creative triumphs, fuelled by her love of dogs, a taste for luxe, and an unstoppable knack for turning challenges into bold projects.