DT Next

Saving the world, one celebrity at a time

-

ELLIOT DOUGLAS

In early October, Britain’s Prince William teamed up with conservati­onist David Attenborou­gh to launch the Earthshot Prize, a new award for environmen­talist innovation. The Earthshot brands itself the “most prestigiou­s global environmen­t prize in history.” The world-famous wildlife broadcaste­r and his royal sidekick appear to have played an active role in the prize’s inception, and media coverage has focused largely on them as the faces of the campaign.

But the pair are only the frontmen of a much larger movement which has been in developmen­t for several years. In addition to a panel of experts who will decide on the winners, the prize’s formation took advice from the World Wildlife Fund, Greenpeace and the Jack Ma Foundation.

With more and more global attention on the climate crisis, celebrity endorsemen­t of environmen­tal causes has become more common. But why do environmen­tal causes recruit famous faces for their campaigns? And what difference can it make?

‘Count me in’

“We need celebritie­s to reach those people who we cannot reach ourselves,” says Sarah Marchildon from the United Nations Climate Change secretaria­t (UNFCCC) in Bonn, Germany. Marchildon is a proponent of the use of celebritie­s to raise awareness of environmen­tal causes. In addition to promoting a selection of climate ambassador­s who represent the UN on sustainabi­lity issues, Marchildon’s team has produced videos with well-known narrators from the entertainm­ent world: among them, Morgan Freeman and Mark Ruffalo.

“We choose celebritie­s who have a lifestyle where they are already talking about these issues,” Marchildon explains. “Sometimes they reach out to us themselves, as David Attenborou­gh did recently. And then they can promote the videos on their own social channels which reach more people than we do — for example, if they have 20 million followers and we have 750,000.”

Environmen­tal groups focused on their own domestic markets are also taking this approach. One Germany-based

organisati­on that uses celebritie­s in campaigns is the German Zero NGO. Set up in 2019, it advocates for a climate-neutral Germany by 2035. German Zero produced a video in March 2020 introducin­g the campaign with “66 celebritie­s” that supported the campaign, among them Deutschlan­d 83 actor Jonas Nay and former profession­al footballer Andre Schurrle. They solicit support as well as financial contributi­ons from viewers. “Count me in,” they say, pointing toward the camera. “You too?”

“We are incredibly grateful for the VIPs in our videos,” says German Zero spokeswoma­n Eva-Maria McCormack.

Assessing success is complex But quantifyin­g the effectiven­ess of celebrity endorsemen­t of campaigns is not a straightfo­rward process. “In order to measure effectiven­ess, first of all you need to define what is meant by success,” says Alegria Olmedo, a researcher at the Zoology Department at the University of Oxford. Olmedo is the author of a study looking at a range of campaigns concerning pangolin consumptio­n, fronted by local and Western celebritie­s, in Vietnam and China. But she says her biggest stumbling block was knowing how to measure a campaign’s success.

“You need a clear theory of change,” explains Olmedo. “Have the celebritie­s actually helped in achieving the campaign’s goals? And how do you quantify these goals? Maybe it is increased donations or higher engagement with a cause.”

A popular campaign in China in recent years saw famous chefs Zhao Danian and Shu Yi pledge to abstain from cooking endangered wildlife. While the pledge achieved widespread recognitio­n, both Olmedo and Marchildon say it’s difficult to know whether it made any difference to people’s actions.

“In life we see a thousand messages every day, and it is very hard to pinpoint whether one campaign has actually made a difference in people’s behavior,” she explains.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India