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Ad Net Zero to mark first anniversary with global summit, training qualification & industry best practice guide

/ September 15th 2021
News & Opinions

2-DAY ONLINE EVENT TO BE BROADCAST LIVE FROM STV’S STUDIOS IN GLASGOW ON 3 & 4 NOVEMBER

London, September 15, 2021: Ad Net Zero, the UK advertising initiative to help the industry respond to the climate crisis caused by CO2 emissions is marking its first-year anniversary with a special 2-day Global Summit. Ad Net Zero is made up of 70 leading companies from across the UK advertising industry, committing to achieving net zero carbon emissions from their operations by end 2030 as part of wider industry drive. It will take place on November 3 & 4 live from Glasgow at the same time as COP26 when the world’s leaders gather to look at measures needed to tackle the challenge of climate change. The Global Summit will be free to attend for any advertising professional from around the world and will provide inspirational content through thought leadership sessions and practical workshops. Anyone interested in attending the Summit online can register for a place here.

In addition, Ad Net Zero will be launching the first training qualification for advertising professionals to fully equip people with the understanding to take responsibility for the carbon emissions related to the operations of advertising work day-to-day, as well as consider the role their work plays in promoting sustainable products and services. The training which will be available online to all ad professionals, in the UK and internationally, via the IPA’s globally recognised CPD platform is in the final stages of beta testing with Ad Net Zero supporters and will be available to the industry later this year.

During the course of 2021, Ad Net Zero supporters have also contributed to the development of a Best Practice Guide for all businesses in the advertising supply chain to help track, measure and reduce their carbon emissions. This Guide, which has also been rigorously tested by the Ad Net Zero supporter base, will be published at the Summit for everyone in the industry to access for free.

Ad Net Zero is headed in the UK by the Advertising Association, ISBA and the IPA and chaired by Unilever. The Global Summit is being funded by the Ad Net Zero supporter base which as of September 2021 has 70 organisations (full list below) representing the broad spectrum of the UK advertising industry, many of whom are also exploring how to accelerate positive action in international territories.

STV will play host to the Summit live from its HQ in Glasgow, directly opposite the location for COP26. Online attendees to the Summit will hear from leaders in companies including Unilever, Mastercard, Pepsico, Havas, Dentsu, WPP, Facebook, Google, Sky, global and international trade bodies such as the World Federation of Advertisers, the UK’s Advertising Standards Authority and isla, global advertising industry experts from the likes of Cannes Lions and Campaign and dynamic initiatives in this space such as ChangeTheBrief and AdGreen.

On Day One (November 3) the content programme will set out the ambitions of Ad Net Zero and the system change needed in the world’s advertising industry to reflect the changes necessary across business and society to tackle the climate emergency. Big themes to be explored include what is meant by sustainable leadership in advertising, the role of marketing to be a force for positive change and the ways we can tackle greenwashing in advertising.

On Day Two (November 4) the content programme will take the form of a series of practical workshops, with step-by-step advice and guidance for advertising professionals to understand how to track, measure and reduce the carbon emissions of their work, as well as support the shift to more sustainable products and services across all areas of people’s lives.

Sebastian Munden, Chair of Ad Net Zero and EVP and General Manager, Unilever UK & Ireland, said: “The goal of the Summit is to help equip every advertising professional, from brands, agencies, media owners and tech platforms, to understand the role they can play day-to-day to support the world-wide industry effort to shift to a more sustainable way of operating. Every attendee will be asked to make a commitment to changing the way they work and, wherever possible, that the work they make helps to ensure the advertising industry, in the UK and internationally, does everything it can to address the climate emergency.”

Paul Bainsfair, Director General, IPA, said: “To accelerate the system change we need to make right through the advertising supply chain, we have been working hard and fast to bring the industry’s first training qualification and Best Practice Guide to market. As we near the completion of the first year of a decade of essential change for our industry, these actions are central as we help everyone who works in advertising to focus the industry’s huge influence on promoting a more sustainable way of living.”

About Ad Net Zero

Acknowledging the need for advertising as a sector to respond to the urgency and scale of the climate crisis caused by CO2 emissions, the Advertising Association’s Climate Action Group produced a report and recommendations for cross-industry action in November 2020 to be taken forward under the umbrella of the Ad Net Zero initiative.

Concern over the issue is shared across the advertising sector by individuals and companies alike. Some 71% of people working across the industry are worried about the negative impacts of the industry on the environment; more want their agencies to take climate action.

Many agencies and companies across the industry have taken their own steps to work more sustainably. New policies and commitments are being announced by firms large and small all the time. But more needs to be done collectively. 

People across the sector want advertising to be part of the solution to the climate crisis, through the role it can play in influencing corporate policy and consumer behaviour, helping people make more sustainable choices in what they buy, use, and do. 91% agree that knowing their organisation is taking climate action would improve their job satisfaction.

Ad Net Zero was established to provide focus for this necessary collaboration. Working together, the supporters will drive carbon-curbing policies throughout the advertising eco-system and will strengthen and extend the sector’s response to a shared challenge.

AD NET ZERO SUPPORTERS AS OF SEPTEMBER 2021:

  1. Accenture Interactive
  2. Across the Pond
  3. adam&eveDDB
  4. Advertising Association
  5. AMV BBDO
  6. APA
  7. APR
  8. Ascential
  9. Campaign Collective
  10. Cedar Communications
  11. Channel 4
  12. Clear Channel
  13. CNN
  14. Coffee and TV
  15. Credos
  16. D&AD
  17. DAS
  18. Dentsu
  19. Digital Cinema Media
  20. Digital Natives
  21. Direct Line
  22. DMA
  23. Droga5
  24. ON
  25. ENGINE
  26. Facebook
  27. Global
  28. Google
  29. Gravity Road
  30. Guardian
  31. Hallam
  32. Harbour
  33. Havas
  34. Havas Media
  35. Haymarket
  36. Hearst
  37. IAB
  38. IPA
  39. IPG Mediabrands
  40. ISBA
  41. ITV
  42. JCDecaux
  43. Just So
  44. Karmarama
  45. Live & Breathe
  46. M&C Saatchi
  47. McCann
  48. M.i. Media
  49. MullenLowe
  50. NatWest
  51. Newsworks
  52. Nexus
  53. Oliver
  54. Omnicom Media Group
  55. Ovo Energy
  56. Park Village
  57. Pintarget
  58. PPA
  59. PRCA
  60. PrettyGreen (HC)
  61. Publicis Groupe
  62. Quiet Storm
  63. Rock Kitchen Harris
  64. Rothco
  65. Royal Mail
  66. Rufus Leonard
  67. Sky
  68. Soul
  69. St Luke’s
  70. STV
  71. TAG
  72. TBWA
  73. TCO
  74. The Kite Factory
  75. The Mill
  76. Unilever
  77. WeAre8
  78. Wieden+Kennedy
  79. WPP