Contemporary politics,local and international current affairs, science, music and extracts from the Queensland Newspaper "THE WORKER" documenting the proud history of the Labour Movement.
MAHATMA GANDHI ~ Truth never damages a cause that is just.
Tuesday, 5 August 2014
World's top PR companies rule out working with climate deniers
A big screen flashes commercials on the
exterior of an office building in Xi’an in north-west China as the air
quality index reaches 282 due to pollution. Photograph: Mayi Wong/EPA
Some of the world’s top PR companies have for the first time
publicly ruled out working with climate change deniers, marking a
fundamental shift in the multi-billion dollar industry that has grown up
around the issue of global warming.
Public relations firms
have played a critical role over the years in framing the debate on
climate change and its solutions – as well as the extensive
disinformation campaigns launched to block those initiatives.
Now a
number of the top 25 global PR firms have told the Guardian they will
not represent clients who deny man-made climate change, or take
campaigns seeking to block regulations limiting carbon pollution.
Companies include WPP, Waggener Edstrom (WE) Worldwide, Weber Shandwick,
Text100, and Finn Partners.
“We would not knowingly partner with a client who denies the existence of climate change,” said Rhian Rotz, spokesman for WE.
Weber
Shandwick would also not take any campaign to block regulations cutting
carbon emissions or promoting renewable energy. “We would not support a
campaign that denies the existence and the threat posed by climate
change, or efforts to obstruct regulations cutting greenhouse gas
emissions and/or renewable energy standards,” spokeswoman Michelle
Selesky said.
“There may be scenarios in which we could represent a
client that has different views on climate change, just not on this
issue.”
The UK-based WPP, the world’s largest advertising firm by
revenue and parent company of Burson Marsteller and Oglivy Public
Relations, said taking on a client or campaign disputing climate change
would violate company guidelines.
“We ensure that our own work
complies with local laws, marketing codes and our own code of business
conduct. These prevent advertising that is intended to mislead and the
denial of climate change would fall into this category,” the company
said.
However, Fiona McEwan, a spokeswoman for the company, said
the 150 companies within WPP made their own decisions on clients and
would not rule out campaigns opposing regulations to cut greenhouse gas
emissions.
The US-based Edelman, which is the world’s largest
independently owned PR firm, did not explicitly rule out taking on
climate deniers as clients.
“Expanding the dialogue in a
constructive manner, and driving productive outcomes to solve energy
challenges are the key criteria for evaluating client engagements,” said
spokesman Michael Bush.
He said Edelman takes on clients on a case-by-case basis.
The PR firms were responding to surveys conducted independently by the Guardian and the Climate Investigations Centre,
a Washington-based group that conducts research on climate
disinformation campaigns. This could have a knock-on effect on the
advertising and lobbying campaigns targeting Barack Obama’s regulations limiting carbon emissions from power plants, and the international negotiations for a climate change treaty, now entering a critical phase.
“The
PR industry is a major component of the influence peddling industry
that stretches across Washington and the world, and they are making
large sums of money from energy companies and other important players
that have businesses connected to fossil fuels and energy policy,” said
Kert Davies, the founder of Climate Investigations.
Davies said
his group took on the research to try to get a better grasp of the
mechanics behind the framing of messages on climate change – and the
disinformation campaign.
Over the past few years, environmental
groups and scientists have been looking more closely at the messaging
around climate change, in part to examine their own failings to build
broader public support for action.
In the process, PR firms have
grown even more influential in shaping the debate around climate policy,
said James Hoggan, who ran his own public relations firm in Vancouver
and founded DeSmogBlog, a blog that describes itself as “clearing the PR pollution that clouds climate science”.
“I
think that public relations people are right at the elbow of powerful
people in industry and government,” he said. “You are an insider – a
very trusted insider – and you can have a huge influence. It really does
matter. These are influential organisations.”
Some of the firms,
such as Finn Partners, have a strong reputation for taking on
environmental causes. “Finn Partners would not work on any campaigns
that deny the reality of climate change nor would we take on a campaign
that would obstruct regulations to reduce greenhouse gas emissions or
renewable energy standards,” said managing partner Peter Finn.
WE
said it had worked on campaigns to expand production tax credits for
wind energy. Oglivy Public Relations told CIC that it recognised the
risks of climate change, and that it had worked on campaigns for WWF and
Greenpeace. But it declined to comment on whether it would represent
clients that deny climate change. Qorvis, a Washington DC-based PR
company, and its parent company MSL Group, also declined to answer that
question.
Other companies however appear concerned with trying to
represent environmental campaign groups as well as industry, according
to Davies.
Only 10 of the 25 firms responded to multiple emails,
phone calls and certified letters from the CIC, either directly or
through a parent company.
Firms that refused to comment include
those that have worked for groups calling for action on climate change –
as well as those seeking to block those efforts.
Hill & Knowlton, for example, was hired as the official media sponsor for the United Nations climate conference in Copenhagen in 2009. The company declined to respond to the CIC survey.
Several
of the companies, such as WPP, WE, Oglivy, and Edelman have ambitious
in-house programmes for reducing their carbon footprint. Qorvis
Communications , a subsidiary of Publicis Groupe, said it had been
calculating its carbon footprint since 2009.
But even those firms with robust internal carbon accounting systems, such as Edelman, were reluctant to go on record.
Edelman’s client list includes the American Petroleum Institute, the main energy lobby, which opposes Barack Obama’s climate change agenda.
Edelman also carried out campaigns supporting the Keystone XL pipeline,
a proposed pipeline to carry tar sands oil from Canada to refineries on
the Gulf coast of Texas.
An initial response to CIC from Edelman
inadvertently included an internal email which said: “I don’t believe we
are obligated in any way to respond. There are only wrong answers for
this guy.”
Edelman did in the end respond to the CIC and the Guardian.
Screengrab of Edelman email conversation
Other firms said they had signed on to the United Nations global compact on sustainable business. However, the compact does not explicitly commit companies to policies on climate change.
Seven
of the firms told the researchers their companies saw climate change as
a threat. But a smaller number would rule out taking on clients that
deny climate change is occurring, or work on campaigns that seek to
block policies to deal with climate change.
“For the majority of
them, they would rather remain neutral on any issue,” Davies said. “They
don’t want to have positions on anything because they like to keep
options open to take on any client who walks in the door. They pretend
they are above the fray and they are not involved, and yet they are the
ones designing ad campaigns, designing lobbying campaigns, and designing
the messages their clients want to convey around climate change.”
The
Climate Investigations Centre sent out surveys in April to the world’s
top 25 firms asking them to go on the record about their views on
climate change.
The short survey asked:
Does your
company acknowledge the threat and challenge of climate change as
companies like Walmart, CocaCola, Apple, Google, AIG, Swiss Re, NRG,
Unilever and others have done?
Does your company have any
internal carbon accounting policies or energy use reduction targets?
Have you taken actions to reduce your “carbon footprint”?
Does
your company have an internal Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR)
policy regarding climate change or the environment generally?
Has
your agency advised any client corporations on communications around
CSR programmes with a specific climate change focus, or on other climate
change related public relations efforts?
The Guardian
followed up by asking firms if they would take on clients that deny the
existence of man-made climate change or campaigns seeking to block
regulations dealing with climate change.
No comments:
Post a Comment