Brussels, 17 June 2008 - An advert for the
Toyota Prius in the European Voice newspaper which breached the European car
labelling directive, has today been ruled misleading by the Belgian advertising
standards authority.
Friends of
the Earth Europe's car efficiency campaigner, Jeroen Verhoeven, filed a complaint against the advertisement which showed an image
of a Toyota Prius and included the words 'Zero emissions low'. The
advertisement did not contain any CO2 emission or fuel consumption data, as is
obliged under Belgian law, and thus violated European labelling directive
1999/94/EC.
An initial complaint filed to the Belgian Jury
d'Ethique Publicitaire (JEP) on the grounds that the advert breached the
directive prompted the response that according to the jury's reading of the
advert 'this car does not have any CO2 emissions'. Subsequently, Mr Verhoeven
filed a second complaint about the misleading nature of the advert, citing the
JEP's own misreading as evidence.
According to Jeroen Verhoeven, this case is just one example of a
massive 'misinformation campaign' by carmakers. "Car manufacturers are using 'greenwash' advertising to confuse
consumers whilst at the same time blocking EU proposals for a target of 120g CO2/km
by 2012. If Toyota is serious about reaching 'zero emissions' anytime soon then
why are they blocking a 2012 target?" he said.
Following evidence that the majority of car
advertisements do not comply with the European car labelling directive, Friends
of the Earth Europe and several other campaign groups have formed the Advertise
CO2 coalition which aims to put pressure on carmakers to provide comprehensive
fuel consumption and CO2 emission data to consumers.
"If
carmakers genuinely want to reduce fuel consumption, they need to respect the
legal requirements and give comprehensive CO2 emissions information in their
advertisements as a minimum," added Mr
Verhoeven.
For more information see www.advertiseco2.eu
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