RiseofSustainableMediaAccording to the global research report The Rise of Sustainable Media, released by Dentsu International and Microsoft Advertising, 59% of consumers worldwide intend to start boycotting brands who don't take action on climate change. There is also almost unanimous support for companies to not only do the right thing for the planet, but also to “show by example”: e.g., 91% of people want brands to demonstrate they are making positive choices about the planet and environment more explicitly – in everything they do. In fact, the willingness and desire to actively embrace more sustainable lifestyles has crossed over to the mainstream with 87% of those surveyed saying they want to do more to combat climate change.

The study clearly emphasizes that climate change is the most identified concern by consumers, ahead of the COVID-19 pandemic (85%), the health of their friends and family (79%), or the cost of living (76%): almost half (45%) of them say they would consider alternative brands, companies or services which are greener or more environmentally friendly than their current choices. Moreover, 30% of respondents say they are willing to pay more for brands which offer those greener alternatives.

Still, many consumers don't know where to start and feel overwhelmed by options and conflicting information: 84% said it is difficult to know whether brands and companies are truly good, green citizens. To help tackle this potential disinformation dilemma, 42% of people now think companies should provide clear, comparable information on the footprint of their products and advertising to prove “being greener”.

"The customer actions and potential boycotts we unearthed in our research are squarely down to the consumer's perception of a company and its behavior, not necessarily the reality. We know many organizations are already taking positive action on climate change. As marketing experts it's our responsibility to guide businesses and help educate and inform their customers, in order to make them think, feel, and act differently,” Peter Huijboom, Global CEO, Media & Global Clients, Dentsu International, explained. “As such, the marketing and advertising industry has a critical role to play as well and we need to work collaboratively to do this authentically; by walking the walk in how we deliver these messages through sustainable media," he concluded.

To date, media delivery and consumption of advertising has yet to become fully associated with carbon emissions in the public eye:

  • Only around one in seven (15%) people think browsing the web contributes negatively to climate change.
  • While just 17% perceive watching TV as contributing to carbon emissions, 14% say the same about gaming and 11% about streaming music.


One in seven (14%) of those who consider the delivery and consumption of advertising having a negative environmental impact, claim to have already acted regarding how they engage with those brands. More than three quarters (77%) of people globally say that, within five years, they only want to be spending money with brands who are practicing green and sustainable advertising.

Indeed, consumers put governments (51%), businesses/brands (43%) and the advertising industry (41%) ahead of themselves (36%) for accountability on who should be held most accountable for decarbonizing the way they experience advertising. Yet, this can't be achieved in isolation, everyone has a part to play.

The study suggests governments, businesses and marketers are running out of time to re-frame the conversation around this topic – as it is the younger consumers and a generational divide driving this perception shift: 45% of boomers believe consuming ads to be negative for the environment, compared with 71% of Gen Z and 73% of Millennials. The young generation’s deep-awareness and concern around the wider environmental issues, coupled with the increased public attention on climate change through global events like the UN climate change conference (COP26), suggest awareness will likely rapidly increase.

"As marketers we've seen how values can create business value, but with this research we wanted to demonstrate more quantitatively why it's significant. This joint research helps us understand and inform businesses across the globe on the awareness and attitudes surrounding carbon in the media supply chain and its corresponding effect on the planet, customer behaviors and purchasing intent. With rapidly changing attitudes and increased pressure to help combat the climate emergency, every marketer can help enable industry wide change at pace," John Cosley, Senior Director of Brand, Microsoft Advertising, said.

The international advertising and media industry is already making strides in decarbonizing traditional media and continues to explore how to expedite this reduction in the way digital media is produced, stored, transmitted, and consumed. For example, pivoting digital spend to low/no carbon providers and shortening the journey from data center to audience, creating OOH posters with recycled paper, using “carbon eating” paint for murals or incorporating elements of search spend in platforms offering carbon off-setting.

The key to ensuring meaningful progress is, however, bringing the entire media ecosystem together to ensure accurate and transparent measurement and reporting of the real carbon impact of media content throughout the lifecycle of a campaign. Thereby providing businesses a clear carbon positive choice for media advertising within their supply chain. (Source: Dentsu International)

By MediaBUZZ