Logo image
The Climate Impact of Misinformation, Disinformation, and Greenwashing in Advertising
Book chapter   Open access

The Climate Impact of Misinformation, Disinformation, and Greenwashing in Advertising

Mariah Tinger, Sara Walton and Paula O’Kane
Rethinking Advertising: Ethics and Effectiveness, pp.51-74
Springer Nature, 1st ed.
2025
Handle:
https://hdl.handle.net/10523/47235

Abstract

Climate change Crying Indian Ad Disinformation ExxonMobil False advertising Greenwashing Misinformation Native advertising
Scientists have known about the urgency of the climate crisis for several decades. Additionally, companies who burn the most fossil fuels have known about the dangers of greenhouse gas emissions for nearly as long. The rise of social media has made it easier for businesses to spread climate misinformation via targeted advertisements. This chapter explores delay, deflection, and distraction advertising campaigns that shift the responsibility of climate action to the individual in ways that are problematic for effective climate progress. We analyze these ad campaigns to probe the central question of this chapter: What are the ethical dilemmas of environmental misinformation and disinformation in advertising? For this analysis, we look first at why addressing deceptive climate advertising matters. Next, we examine how climate misinformation and disinformation are used in advertisements. In the final section, we propose ways to spot mis- and disinformation in advertising and offer ideas about what can be done about it. We conclude with recommendations: (1) combatting false climate advertising via debunking and prebunking ad campaigns, (2) pushing for corporations to lead by modeling sustainability, and (3) pushing for regulations to eliminate the loopholes that allow for misleading climate advertising.
url
https://rdcu.be/exBx5View
Published (Version of record)Free to read via Springer Nature SharedIt InitiativeAll Rights Reserved Open

Metrics

53 Record Views

Details

Logo image