Eric Berger
Aug 8, 2024

World Wildlife Fund spotlights global climate records in Olympics campaign

The 60-second spot contrasts the reality that as athletes shatter records at the Games, the world is smashing climate records.

Photo credit: World Wildlife Fund, used with permission.
Photo credit: World Wildlife Fund, used with permission.

Just days before the start of the Paris Olympics, scientists reported that July 24 was Earth’s hottest day on record, breaking a record set just a day earlier.  

That’s the sort of mark related to climate change that the World Wildlife Fund (WWF) sought to highlight in its latest campaign, released on Monday, as people around the world celebrate athletes’ monumental achievements during the Olympics. 

The Climate Games calls attention to the increase in global temperatures and extreme weather events in recent years by juxtaposing these dangerous developments with the concept of breaking records in sports.

The 60-second spot uses sportscasters' voices to narrate record-breaking climate disasters paired with videos of wildfires, flooding and people affected by extreme heat. 

“The whole world is watching the Olympics, and we all celebrate the impressive sports records that athletes are able to break,” said Hallvard Vaaland, copywriter for Try, the agency behind the campaign. “We needed to use that [occasion] when people already care about records being broken to spotlight the records that are not meant to be celebrated.”

Producing the spot required transcribing clips of hundreds of sporting events and recreating the commentary, Vaaland said. The agency provided templates to WWF offices around the world, which they can customise to feature their own country’s climate records.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

A post shared by WWF France (@wwffrance)

 

The campaign is running on WWF’s owned social channels, as well as on French television during the Olympics, including before the men’s 100-meter finals. 

WWF also issued an international press release and releases specific to various countries to generate media buzz for the campaign globally, added Mathias Sandvik, art director for Try, which is based in Norway.

 

Source:
Campaign US

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