Ads for British beef and milk banned following Chris Packham complaint


Two ads promoting British beef and milk have been banned after television presenter and environmental campaigner Chris Packham complained that they misled consumers about the productsโ€™ carbon footprints.

Both ads for the Agriculture and Horticulture Development Boardโ€™s (AHDB) Letโ€™s Eat Balanced campaign used the carbon footprint of British beef and milk to promote the products, firstly stating: โ€œBritish beef not only tastes great, but has a carbon footprint thatโ€™s half the global average*.โ€

The asterisk linked to text that stated: โ€œFull lifecycle emissions of CO2 eq (carbon dioxide equivalent) per kg of beef.โ€

The ad for milk stated: โ€œBritish milk not only tastes good, but is also produced to world-class standards, and has a carbon footprint a third lower than the global average.โ€

Packham complained to the Advertising Standards Authority (ASA) that the ads, and specifically the carbon footprint claims, were misleading as they did not reflect the full environmental impact of British meat and dairy.

The AHDB said the adsโ€™ mention of carbon emissions would be understood in relation to the environmental impact of beef and milk that occurred between the โ€œcradle-to-retailโ€ stages.

But the ASA said the average consumer โ€œbeing reasonably well-informed, observant and circumspectโ€ would understand the claims to apply beyond the retail stage and include actions such as cooking and wastage.

The ASA said: โ€œWhile we acknowledged the potential difficulties in producing post-retail emissions data, the claims in the ads suggested those emissions were included and we therefore expected the evidence provided to also include them.

โ€œWe therefore concluded that the evidence presented was insufficient to support the full life-cycle claims in the ads, which was how the average consumer was likely to interpret them.

โ€œWe reminded AHDB that environmental claims should be based on the full life cycle unless the ad stated otherwise.โ€

AHDBโ€™s director of communications and market development, Will Jackson, said: โ€œLetโ€™s Eat Balanced is doing what it was designed to do, providing clear, factual, evidence-led information about British food, nutrition and farming standards.

โ€œSince the investigation began, we have conducted independent consumer research which found that the majority of respondents interpreted these adverts as relating to the production phase only, from farm to retail.

โ€œThis research provides important insight into consumer understanding and supports our belief that consumers were not misled by the information we shared in these two specific adverts.โ€

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