the greenwash academy
3pm jo’burg time friday 23 august
Oil majors Shell, BP and ExxonMobil
dominated today’s World Summit Greenwash
Academy Awards, beating Biotech giants
Monsanto, Novartis and Aventis in a
glittering award ceremony in Jo’burg. Local
South African underdog Sasol edged out Eskom
for Best Picture.
We laughed! We cried!
“And the winner is…”
Other winners were Enron for Best Makeup,
Arthur Andersen for Best Documentary
Destruction, and an unprecedented joint award
to Total, Unocal and Premier Oil for Best
Foreign Direct Investment.
The ceremony was disrupted briefly by
Ronald McDonald, who demanded an> Award
for McDonald’s partnership with UNICEF. The
Academy spontaneously decided to give a
special “Type II” McPartnership Award for the
McUNICEF collaboration.
“Ten years ago in Rio, global business
promised to deliver sustainable development.
They have broken that promise, but they have
delivered a motherlode of Greenwash,” said
Oscar Green, the ceremony’s host.
“Oil companies are presenting themselves
as solar companies, and companies that
promote giant agribusiness and oppose
consumer
information are claiming to be the solution
to world hunger,” said Craig Bennett of
Friends of the Earth, a member of the
Greenwash Academy. “We are delighted to
recognize these companies for what they are:
hypocrites.”
“These polluting companies are posing as
friends of the environment and leaders in the
struggle to eradicate poverty,” said Kenny
Bruno of CorpWatch, another member of the
Academy. “But often they spend more
advertising their green projects than on the
projects themselves.
That’s Greenwash!”
“With acting like this, it’s no wonder the
UN is rushing to partner
with corporations that do so much damage to
our societies,” said Bobby Peek of
groundWork, an Academy member. “But the rest
of us are not fooled.”
The full list of Greenwash Academy Awards,
or “Green Oscars”:
Award Category: The Winners: Runners
Up:
best greenwash
BP for their Beyond
Petroleum rebranding campaign.
Mining corporations (Newmont, Rio Tinto, BHP
Billiton, Anglo-American) and the OECD
Guidelines for Multinational Enterprises.
best bluewash
Nestlé for overcoming
one of the worst corporate reputations out
there and daring to show its face at the
United Nations Novartis and Aventis for
leaping at the chance to lead the UN Global
Compact.
best supporting government
United
States of America for representing corporate
interests in environmental treaty
negotiations.
best supporting un agency
The Office
of the Global Compact for allowing
corporations to ally with the UN without
committing to following its principles. UNEP
for co-hosting – with the International
Chamber of Commerce the World Summit Awards
for Sustainable Partnerships in Joburg.
best documentary destruction
Arthur
Anderson for excellence in shredding
best foreign direct investment
The
Academy made a special joint award to Unocal,
Total and Premier Oil for pipeline projects
in Burma.
best make up
Enron for, well, you know…
Asia Pacific Resources Limited (APRIL) for
clearcutting Indonesian rainforest while
making claims about sustainability
best picture
Sasol for “putting as
much into the community as they do into
petrol”. Eskom for being a key member of
Business Action for Sustainable Development
while generating electricity from coal and
nukes.
best director
Lee Raymond of
ExxonMobil for deep greenwash (lobbying and
bullying behind the scenes while pretending
to care for public interest). -
booby prize
Philip Morris and British
American Tobacco for not
convincing anybody despite spending hundreds
of millions on PR. -
lifetime achievement
Shell for
outstanding achievement over a decade.
Monsanto for tireless promotion of Roundup
Ready GM crops as a solution to world
hunger.
special mcpartnership award
UNICEF
for its partnership with McDonalds
The Academy’s definitions of Greenwash and
Bluewash:
[1] Green*wash: (gren-wôsh) –washers,
–washing, -washed
1) The phenomenon of socially and
environmentally destructive corporations
attempting to preserve and expand their
markets by posing as friends of the
environment and leaders in the struggle to
eradicate poverty.
2) Environmental whitewash.
3) Hogwash.
[2] Blue*wash (n):
1. Allowing some of the largest and
richest
corporations to wrap themselves in the
United Nations’ blue flag
without requiring them to do anything new
(New York Times).
2. Efforts by corporations to be perceived
as part of the world humanitarian
community through voluntary association with
the United Nations,
without provisions for accountability.
CONTACT
Craig Bennett, Friends of the Earth (in
Jo'burg) +27 72 406 4748
Linda Ambler, GroundWork South Africa + 27
83 750 7560
Matt Phillips, Friends of the Earth (in
London) +44 (0)20 7566 1660
+44 (0) 7817 314706
The Greenwash Academy is supported by
Friends of the Earth International,
GroundWork South Africa and CorpWatch
A full pdf programme of the Greenwash
Academy Awards is available
here
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