Press Release
We laughed! We cried! And the winners are...!
Issued by The
Greenwash Academy
[comprising groundWork,
CorpWatch and Friends of the Earth International]
[Click here
to see the full programme for the 2002 Greenwash
Academy Awards ceremony.] |
August 23, 2002, Johannesburg: Oil majors Shell, BP and ExxonMobil
dominated today’s World Summit Greenwash Academy Awards, Biotech giants
Monsanto, Novartis and Aventis in a glittering award ceremony in Joburg.
Local South African underdog Sasol edged out Eskom for Best Picture.
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 |
|
Click here to see the full
programme for the 2002 Greenwash Academy Awards ceremony.
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. |