Tuesday, February 23, 2010

Question: Should car advertizing be more heavily regulated? Or taxed? Or mandate compensatory advertizing? Or or . . . ?

Our sustainable colleagues over at Nuova Mobilità, our Italian-language sister publication, have shown more consistent aggressiveness concerning debating the issues of car advertising then we (which points out the advantages of diversity) -- but from time to time we too consider that it is useful to give this some thought and dialogue. N/M picked up the following quite contentious article on the subject today from the Guardian, which we are also pleased to share with you for your information and comment. (Ours appear at the end of this article).

Want to promote cycling? Cut back car adverts now

- Tom Bogdanowicz, guardian.co.uk. London. Wednesday, 17 February 2010.

The UK spends £500m a year on car ads and fetishises auto-ownership – no wonder cycling is stuck in the slow lane

Step out of your home and what do you see? There is a subliminal and overt message on the streets and in the media to buy cars and use them. You'll find it on TV, on your computer, in the newspapers you read. It makes the promotion of any other form or transport, such as cycling, an uphill struggle regardless of how convenient, healthy and sustainable it may be.

The advertising spend on the promotion of motor vehicles in the UK exceeds £500m a year. And, by and large, it works: car ownership has grown steadily since the 1940s and, after the current economic crisis abates, it will likely continue to do so.

In sharp contrast, the promotion of cycling and walking is almost non-existent. When Transport for London ran a TV ad promoting cycling it was a unique occasion. The number of cyclists on UK roads has dropped sharply since the 1940s, and London stands out as a rare example of a city where cycling has doubled in six years.

While the government encourages us to walk, ride bikes and use public transport, it knows that car advertising is persuading us to do the exact opposite. Instead of sharing one car, households buy two or three so that everyone can express their own personality through their vehicle. If you believe the advertising, your car will make you more attractive, more popular and more successful. How many car ads show the reality of being stuck in traffic or the frustration of searching for a parking space?

Cycling gets the occasional media boost when team GB sweeps the Olympic medals or cycling in London soars, as more people realise it's faster around town than driving. But very few companies pay big money for bike ads, so newspapers don't have cycling sections – with notable exceptions, such as this blog - and there is no cycling equivalent of Top Gear.

The outcome of all that PR for cars is more sales as well as more congestion, more pollution and a greater demand for scarce parking spaces. There would have been no need for the congestion charge in London if not for the success of the auto industry's publicity machine and the popularity of motoring programmes.

Reversing the trend of ever-increasing car ownership and use is not as difficult as it seems. If governments were to limit car advertising, as they did with alcohol and tobacco when the health impacts were recognised, people would take decisions about their mode of transport based on common sense rather than the promise of open highways, high speeds and glamorous locations. Common sense might well encourage cycling or walking for more journeys.

The survival of cycling as a transport mode and its growth in London is a tribute to its convenience and simplicity. Surveys show that one-in-five of us would like to cycle. If the barriers to cycling were removed – such as perceived danger and a lack of cycling infrastructure – cycle journeys in the UK might increase tenfold to the levels seen in Holland or Denmark. The benefits are obvious: more cycling and walking would help prevent health problems as well as climate change.

Holland is lucky to have invested in cycling before car-oriented planning created a road system that discourages cycle use. The UK, unfortunately, has seen several decades of car-centred planning. But, as London shows, the UK can still join the virtuous circle. Local traffic management schemes can be redesigned to allow cyclists through them and urban gyratories can be removed.

If reduced auto promotion stemmed the growth in car ownership as well, we could see more people cycling and drivers might discover that the roads were less busy and parking spaces easier to come by. In fact, there is little choice; Britain's urban population continues to grow – unless we enable people to cycle and walk more, and stop persuading them to use cars, we face gridlock.

# # #

About the author:
• Tom Bogdanowicz is campaigns and development officer for the London Cycle Campaign

* Source: guardian.co.uk. http://tinyurl.com/yb7ssh9

* Reader comments here: http://tinyurl.com/yznghcu


From the editor: A Personal Reflection:


It is not exactly that recourse to the law is the last refuge of a scoundrel, but it - that is the crude hammer of the law - is certainly the last refuge of citizens and political leaders who are not able to come up with a better and softer path to get the job done. Which is to say that we approach matters like this with a heavy heart, but then are ready to hear the arguments from both sides, all while not forgetting what sustainability and social justice are all about.

The bottom line: As an essentially naïve person, I always tend to confound or confuse (or wish hopefully about) advertising as having primarily an information function. Of course when any of us has a point we wish to make, there is also a human tendency to try to make that point in a way which renders it agreeable for the public you are trying to get on your side. At one point of course this can become a matter of more even than simple cajoling , namely attempting behavior modification, and this brings us in front of an ethical choice, or maybe better a dilemma.

I, and I am almost certain you also, have reached the conclusion that advertising in public places and the media can be extremely useful in matters in which society is having a problem or two: smoking too much, speeding too fast, drug dependency, various forms of unfair discrimination, the long list goes on. No reasonable person can deplore the intelligent and in a surprising number of cases pretty effective advertising/information campaigns that have been run over the last several decades in order to modify behavior of large numbers of people and create really a better and safer society for all. Moreover I, and once again I bet you too, want to see more of this done wisely and effectively.

Now back to our topic, namely the at least highly dubious habits of the automobile industry advertising practices. And here I have to put my cards on the table and state that I am not an anti-car guy. I have had quite a range of cars over the years which by and large I greatly appreciated and I think have used wisely. On the other hand, we are all increasingly aware that as things stand today there are many situations in which "own-cars" are not always necessarily the best way to get around every day (particularly in cities of course). Anyway, we shall soon enough have a billion of them raring to go all over the planet, so it is our job as citizen-guardians of the concept of sustainable transportation to provide perspective and, if we can manage it, wise counsel as to what exactly is going to be their proper place in society. After all, that is what governance is all about.

For starters, anyone would have to be blind or soft in the head not to see the pernicious qualities of much of the car advertising that we presently have in our various print and electronic media. Much of this goes well beyond giving us simple information about their products, and with the help of very sophisticated media specialists and experts in behavioral psychology often combine to create pattern and attitudes which are far from being in the public interest.

The fixation with speed, the subtle ways of manipulating and implying speed as a personal (to some) if not a social value -- and hey! everybody knows that speed kills -- gives us a great place to start. Some of the rest is more puzzling and is going to be more difficult, so until we can sort this out, speed gives us a good training ground to get going and figure out how to handle the rest.

My position on this today then is that I feel there is every reason for the vigorous public debate in as many fora and places as can be reached. Tom Bogdanowicz's points are worthy of reflection, and it is good to see him looking at all of this from the perspective of cyclists. And if you click here - http://tinyurl.com/yznghcu - you will be taken to the extremely lively commentary that his article has excited, and which also might find it useful to spend the time with.

I wish I could tell you that I have a way to wrap this up so that you can put it all behind you and move on to other things. But I cannot and so as resourceful citizens we have to keep thinking about it, talking about it, and pretty soon doing something about it.

Eric Britton
Editor, World Streets

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3 comments:

  1. - Todd Edelman, BerlinTuesday, 23 February, 2010

    One might quite easily... draw upon a cigarette advertisement and restrictions to see what could apply to automobile advertisement and restrictions. (Just to make things simple, herein I will leave out manufacturing effects of both automobiles and cigarettes).

    First of all, an driver with automobile operates in a system much like a smoker generally operates around other people.

    If the latter is on private property (except, e.g., in their automobile in Finland, where smoking is not permitted if a child is present) or outside in most public places there are no restrictions on what they may do to themselves, albeit taxes and of course a certain amount of advertising restriction which might reduce information and promotion about said product. But around people in public or semi-public (restaurants, etc.) places there are restrictions in order to protect the health of others.

    What applies to driving an automobile? A driver with automobile is never alone: Certainly not in a city but also not in the countryside of course because it produces one or more types of emissions and threatens one or more types of animals with quite radical surgery. As a general guide - using the cigarette example -Â this would seem to indicate that automobiles need similar restrictions wherever they are used -- and that should include advertising. Seems logical, no?

    There is no parallel in tobaccoland for gross distinctions between automobiles. With automobiles, there is a tremendous range of passive smoking analogues, from the big noisy polluting urban SUV driven alone in New York City to the old, slow Yugo in Kosovo (or 2CV elsewhere in Europe), shared informally by three or more families outside of town and thus relatively efficient and safe, i.e. free of passive smoking effects. The automobile operates in a good to bad system, so perhaps that should decide if adverts are permitted or not: An automobile intended for private use cannot be advertised, though if there is a way to advertise an automobile for private rural use alone it could be okay. Also, a urban public transport operator could be free to advertise its carshare operation. The difference is the system.

    My logic is not airtight but I do not intend it to be. We need to ask a lot more questions...

    Cigarettes are allowed advertising in public in Germany, and also at points of sale all across the EU. This lessens the total amount but it would be nice to have it be more system-sensitive. Peer pressure for both smoking and various types of automobile use probably has much more effect than advertising alone (would like to see some research on this.). In general I would say that advertising appropriately-used automobiles is okay, but advertising "cars" is not.

    (I define "automobile" in technical terms, as a rubber-tyred unguided road vehicle made for 2 to about 10 passengers plus cargo, and "car" as the name for inappropriate use of same qualified by it having two or more of the following characteristics: Used in cities; nearly empty; because of tax loopholes as with company vehicles; using nuclear- or coal-energy; petroleum prizes from recent and current military endeavours, etc. To be a bit more specific and hopefully explain a wee bit better, a private car in a city is heroin, whereas a shared car is methadone -- the latter much better for everyone involved in the short- to medium-term until cities are built/rebuilt so that no one living in or visiting them needs or desires an automobile of any sort)

    - Todd Edelman, Green Idea Factory, Berlin

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  2. Colin Brander, AustraliaWednesday, 24 February, 2010

    I think that there should at a minimum requirement to be realistic and responsible. There are too many ads that show what I would consider dangerous driving. According to the Australia Medical Association website (http://www.ama.com.au/node/994), Australia has the following restrictions:


    The Advertising Standards Bureau has released tough new advertising standards that will hopefully deter car advertising that glorifies speeding, reckless driving, the use of drugs or alcohol in ads, tired drivers, or motorcyclists not wearing helmets.
    (I can't find the specific regulation.) I think this is a step in the right direction and should be required elsewhere. Wouldn't it be nice if motor vehicle ads were required to have a disclaimer stating that driving is a dangerous activity and that a driver is responsible for driving safely and legally...


    Colin Brander, Australia

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  3. Simon Norton, Cambridge, UKThursday, 25 February, 2010

    The regulatory frameworks highlighted in the comments so far on this issue seem
    to hfocus solely on safety. While this is clearly an important issue, it is far
    from the only issue that matters. It was certainly not the issue that dominated
    the Guardian article mentioned in the original post.

    Some of the comments on the article said that advertising could not be held
    solely to blame for why people choose cars rather than bikes and buses. I think
    this is true -- many people, including myself, simply don't have what it takes
    to tolerate cycling in heavy traffic, even ignoring the issue of safety. Nor
    does it take advertising to make them intolerant of a half hour wait in freezing
    weather for a bus service that is supposed to run every 20 minutes (as I
    recently had to tolerate in Cambridge, due to jams caused by parents picking
    their children up from school).

    However I think that one can blame advertising for the sense many non-motorists
    feel that their needs are not considered important. This applies to that
    notorious Vancouver advertisement which branded public transport users as
    losers, but it also applies to the more common type of advertisement which takes
    it for granted that people want to travel by car and concentrates on
    highlighting the virtues of a particular make of car.

    An example of our needs not being seen as important comes out in an article in
    today's Guardian in the Notes and Queries feature, where a reader attributes the
    invasion of high streets by charity shops, and certain other types of shop that
    have mushroomed in recent years, to the migration of sales of more traditional
    items to supermarkets, highlighting the convenience they offer. However, on this
    argument, why aren't supermarkets among the types of shop that have invaded our
    high streets ? I myself, who admit to appreciating the convenience of
    supermarkets, am regularly inconvenienced in Cambridge because our city centre
    has only 1 major supermarket and many of the things I want are not available at
    that branch. There must be a lot of people who don't drive cars -- especially in
    Cambridge with its high cycling rates -- for whom a central location is of
    paramount importance in terms of convenience, why aren't they considered ?

    The relevant article can be seen on
    .

    Simon Norton, Cambridge, UK

    ReplyDelete

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