
-
Digital divas: Can Japan's virtual YouTuber craze crack America?
-
WHO pandemic agreement talks face deadline crunch
-
Stocks, dollar sink and gold hits record as Trump tariff panic returns
-
LeMond hails 'one in a million' Pogacar ahead of Paris-Roubaix debut
-
Liverpool can move closer to the title as top five tension mounts
-
Trump admits trade war 'cost' as markets hit
-
AI only just beginning to revolutionize the NBA game
-
Despite Trump pause, overall US tariff rate at highest in a century
-
'A pain that doesn't subside' at funerals for Dominican nightclub disaster victims
-
Panama deal allows US to deploy troops to canal
-
US firm says it brought back extinct dire wolves
-
Grieving Dominicans start burying 220 victims of nightclub disaster
-
Aberg closes strong at 'sneaky hard' Augusta National
-
US auto union praises some Trump tariffs
-
Australian IVF clinic admits embryo mix-up
-
Rose: I've played well enough to win Masters but lack the jacket
-
Rose again enjoys 'luxury' of first-round Masters lead
-
Rose rockets to Masters lead, defending champ Scheffler in pursuit
-
Tesla opens first showroom in oil-rich Saudi
-
Oscars to add new award for stunts
-
Hatton loves being at Masters but 'It's just so hard'
-
'Mistakes can happen': Amorim backs Onana after Lyon nightmare
-
RFK Jr says study will reveal cause of autism 'epidemic'
-
Tourist family, pilot killed in 'tragic' NY helicopter crash
-
No.1 Scheffler makes strong Masters start to defend title
-
Man Utd and Spurs draw in Europa League, Rangers hold Athletic
-
Rose rockets to Masters lead with Scheffler and McIlroy in pursuit
-
Man Utd held late in Lyon after Onana errors in Europa League
-
Man Utd held late in Lyon after Onana errors
-
Wall Street rally fizzles as tariff fears resurface
-
MLS to open 'second phase' of major season overhaul study
-
Argentina braves 24-hour strike as it awaits word on IMF loan
-
Spain's Ballester finds relief in Masters water hazard
-
Porro rescues Postecoglou as Spurs held by Frankfurt
-
Grieving Dominicans start burying 200+ victims of nightclub disaster
-
CONMEBOL proposes one-off 64-team World Cup in 2030
-
Rybakina on form for Kazakhstan in BJK Cup
-
Former Real Madrid coach Leo Beenhakker dies aged 82
-
Rose rockets to top of Masters leaderboard, Scheffler one back
-
Langer fades after fiery start in Masters farewell
-
Iran, US raise stakes ahead of key talks in Oman
-
US-China confrontation overshadows Trump's 'beautiful' trade war
-
RFK, MLK assassination files to be released in 'next few days'
-
Relevent settle anti-trust lawsuit with US Soccer
-
Orcas, dolphins stuck in closed French marine park
-
Rahul shines as Delhi bag fourth straight win in IPL
-
Family bid farewell to merengue singer, killed in Dominican nightclub disaster
-
Mbappe ups stakes in bid to recoup 55mn euros from PSG
-
Scheffler grabs share of early lead in quest for Masters repeat
-
Why did a Dominican nightclub roof cave in?

Social media greenwashing by fossil fuel interests 'rampant': study
A commercial plane photoshopped with the tail of a shark, hashtags that misleadingly evoke sustainability, tokenistic use of minorities to distract and to signal virtue: a Harvard report published Tuesday highlights rampant greenwashing by leading companies on social media.
The investigation, commissioned by Greenpeace Netherlands, involved analyzing the text and images of 2,300 posts by 22 of Europe's largest carmakers, fossil fuel producers and airlines this June and July.
"During this summer of record temperatures and wildfires in Europe, these fossil fuel interests have remained explicitly silent on the topic of climate change, and instead, they engage in what we interpret to be strategic brand positioning," lead author Geoffrey Supran told AFP.
Entitled "Three Shades of Green(washing)," the report released during New York's Climate Week found that only one in five "green" car ads actually present a product for sale, while the rest simply promote the brand as green.
One in five posts by oil, car and airline companies center on sports, fashion or social causes that direct attention away from their core businesses.
Two-thirds of companies' social media posts painted a "green innovation" sheen on their operations, the report found, with automakers generating by far the most compared with airlines and oil and gas firms.
While there was already some awareness around these trends, Supran said the strength of the new study was its use of peer-reviewed social science methods to lend more quantitative weight.
A key feature of the companies' posts was how often they were about their sponsorship of sports events or charity, as opposed to talking about what they sell.
"In principle those kinds of activities should be applauded. The issue becomes when corporate philanthropy slips into corporate social responsibility washing, things like greenwashing, sportswashing, and wokewashing," Supran said.
Examples of greenwashing include an Instagram post by Lufthansa where a plane blends into the body of a shark swimming in the ocean.
The post was to highlight a coating modeled off shark skin that is applied to the plane's body to improve airflow and reduce fuel consumption.
Tweets by Air France-KLM and Lufthansa promoted their use of biofuel on some routes using the hashtag "SustainableAviationFuel."
Those posts omit the fact that such fuels constitute only a tiny fraction of overall fuel used by the industry, and not all experts are yet convinced it can power climate-safe air travel, the report said.
- 'Pretty insidious' -
Green posts also tend to feature more women, non-binary people and non-Caucasian people -- for example, a tweet by Wizz Air on World Environment Day shows an elderly Black woman, who appears to be part tree, part person, standing in a lush green forest.
Not only does the post appear tokenistic, the report said, it also promotes an article about how to reduce personal energy consumption.
This is a widespread corporate practice researchers call "redirecting responsibility" in which individual behavior, rather than the actions of governments and companies, is placed at the center of climate action.
A YouTube video by Fiat meanwhile features a group of attractive youths sailing and driving through beautiful mountains in the Italian countryside.
"Behavioral psychologists have observed significant affective responses from consumers exposed to nature imagery," explained Supran.
"It can make a company seem greener actually in a unique way that does the subtle work of overriding even the most critical observers in a pretty insidious way."
Silvia Pastorelli, a Greenpeace campaigner, said in a statement that the report highlighted techniques that had been "hiding in plain sight."
"This is a systematic greenwashing effort that must be addressed with a legal ban on all fossil fuel advertising and sponsorship across Europe, just as happened with tobacco," she added.
P.Silva--AMWN