Adtech’s climate challenge: Can marketing cool the planet?

The Green Media Summit looks to give people actionable ideas about how their business and industry can generate less greenhouse gasses.



Can adtech and marketing do anything to cool down our overheating world? That existential question is the focus of a conference in New York next week.


“Two or three years ago, we as a company learned of the degree digital advertising impacts carbon emissions. The energy it takes to power the internet is more than the civil aviation industry, which is just shocking,” said Frank Maguire, VP of Insights, Strategy and Sustainability at Sharethrough, a programmatic adtech company. “And digital ads are a big part of that.”


The 2020 study Maguire referred to showed the energy used to run the internet is responsible for 3.7% of all greenhouse gasses, a number that will have doubled by next year. It’s important to note that the study was done before the recent explosion of power-hungry AI technology.


The Sharethrough team realized they had to do something and last year put together the first Green Media Summit. 


Taking action


“We used to run native ad summits so we kind of took some of that playbook, and we’re like ‘Why don’t we put together a last-minute summit?’” Maguire told MarTech. The idea was to bring together brands, agencies, DSPs, adtech providers and publishers to talk about what they were trying to do, what they’ve learned, and also what they needed from the rest of the industry.


That last-minute summit turned into an eight-hour, standing-room-only event that drew more than 300 people. The second now-annual Green Media Summit is on Monday, April 8, in New York.


“Last year was more about education, and this year is really about trying to take action,” said Maguire. “Even speaking about it with agencies and brands, we just realized how much education was needed. We did a consumer poll that showed that more than 60% of people didn’t even know that the internet generated emissions. And it was pretty much the same with brands.” 


Companies quiet about efforts


He said an increasing number of brands care about sustainability but are nervous about spotlighting their efforts. They risk being accused of greenwashing if their efforts are superficial. However, there’s also the risk of being called “woke environmentalists” for doing anything at all.


“In some circles, ESG is a four-letter word now,” he said.


On the plus side, sales of products marketed as sustainable grew more than twice as fast as products not marketed as sustainable and achieved a five-year compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 9.43% vs. 4.98% for its conventional counterparts, according to a study by NYU’s Stern School of Business.


 


While looming environmental catastrophe can be a powerful motivator for brands, there’s an apolitical counterforce that can stop them from changing: Corporate inertia. 


“The hardest part is some of the older companies are set in their ways and they either don’t want to disrupt it or it’s trying to change course on a fast-moving oil tanker or whatever analogy you want to use,” said Maguire. “It’s a big work.”


 


So at this year’s conference, all the speakers and panelists are being asked to focus on coming up with actionable ideas to drive change in the company and the industry overall. 


Make marketing more effective


This means looking beyond the digital part of advertising to the entire life cycle of their development. What can be done to cut down on the resources used for everything from ad production to delivery, media distribution and where and how they are run. 


Doing this not only saves money but also makes the advertising more effective. 


Media properties with the biggest carbon footprint are typically fraud, click-bait or offer low-value inventory, according to Scope3’s State of Sustainability Report. These sites make up 10% of the domains in the five countries studied by the report — the U.S., U.K., France, Germany and Australia — and contribute 33,500 metric tons of carbon dioxide equivalent (CO2e) greenhouse gasses per month. That’s equal to driving a car 86,000,000 miles or 3,449 times around Earth. Between January 2020 and May 2022, $ 115 million was spent on advertising on these sites.


 


AI and the environment


Maybe the only thing bigger than the upside of AI is the amount of resources it uses. By 2027 the AI sector could consume between 85 to 134 terawatt hours of electricity annually — that’s about the same as the annual energy demand of the Netherlands. It also uses millions of gallons of water to cool the servers needed to train and operate it. This has Maguire understandably worried.


“I think some of the progress we’ve made even in the last couple of years could be completely wiped out by AI and how much energy is required for that,” he said.


Like everyone who keeps up on environmental news, Maguire knows how dire our current situation is. He also knows that makes it more important than ever to take action now.


“It’s easy to be really pessimistic about it because we’re speeding towards that two-degree increase in temperature and a lot of things can’t be reversed,” he said. “But we still have this necessity to do as much as possible in every industry, every company has this responsibility for our future.”








 


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Constantine von Hoffman is managing editor of MarTech. A veteran journalist, Con has covered business, finance, marketing and tech for CBSNews.com, Brandweek, CMO, and Inc. He has been city editor of the Boston Herald, news producer at NPR, and has written for Harvard Business Review, Boston Magazine, Sierra, and many other publications. He has also been a professional stand-up comedian, given talks at anime and gaming conventions on everything from My Neighbor Totoro to the history of dice and boardgames, and is author of the magical realist novel John Henry the Revelator. He lives in Boston with his wife, Jennifer, and either too many or too few dogs.

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