Oil giant Shell has once again had its knuckles rapped by the watchdog for
overstating its green credentials after it claimed in an advert that its $10bn
oil sands project in northern Canada represented a "sustainable energy source".
The Canadian tar sands, which are being targeted by Shell, BP and several
other oil majors, are being strip mined so that the recovered bitumen can be
turned into oil. However, the projects have been condemned by environmentalists
who claim that because the refining processes involved require far more energy
than conventional oil, it is responsible for up to eight times more carbon
emissions.
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Despite these concerns, the Shell advert cited both its oil sands project and
its plans to build the largest refinery in the US as examples of how the company
is attempting to "meet the growing need for energy in ways that are not only
profitable, but sustainable".
The advert attracted a complaint to the Advertising Standards Authority (ASA)
from environmental group WWF over the use of the word sustainable with reference
to the two projects.
Shell told the ASA that the term was based on the World Commission on
Environment and Development definition of sustainable development as "
development which meets the needs of the present generation without compromising
the ability of future generations to meet their own needs", adding that the
company "recognised the importance of affordable and convenient energy in
achieving that, while underlining the importance of protecting the environment"
.
It added that the two projects had taken account of environmental
considerations and that the company was committed to cutting carbon emissions by
five per cent on 1990 levels by 2010.
However, the
ASA
upheld the WWF's complaint and in a ruling that is likely to have
repercussions for all firms advertising their green credentials, rejected the
argument that the lack of a universal definition meant the term sustainable was
"likely to be ambiguous and unclear to consumers".
Citing Defra guidance on green adverts, the ASA noted that "claims should
always avoid the vague use of terms such as sustainable, green, non-polluting
and so on". It added that, "because sustainable was an ambiguous term, and
because we had not seen data that showed how Shell was effectively managing
carbon emissions from its oil sands projects to limit climate change, we
concluded that on this point the advert was misleading".
The ruling comes just a week after a
major
report from the Co-operative Group and the WWF further cranked up pressure
on oil firms to review their tar sands policies, arguing that the likelihood of
carbon regulation meant that the projects represented an unacceptable risk to
investors.
It is also the second time that the company has been taken to task over its
advertising of green claims. In a high profile case last year, the
ASA
banned an advert from the company that showed an oil refinery emitting
flowers instead of smoke which claimed it used "waste CO2 to grow flowers and
waste sulphur to make super-strong concrete". In fact, the company captures less
than 0.5 per cent of its direct CO2 emissions to help grow flowers.
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