In a letter to BP America CEO Lamar McKay,
Reps. Henry Waxman (D-CA) and Rep. Bart Stupak (D-MI) are demanding that
BP disclose its “spending on corporate
advertising
and marketing relating to the the Deepwater Horizon oil spill and
relief, recovery, and restoration efforts in the Gulf of Mexico.” Their
request follows the efforts of Rep. Kathy
Castor
(D-FL) to get answers about BP’s massive greenwashing campaign, which
includes months of full-page advertisements in national and regional
newspapers, radio spots, television commercials, and Internet ads.
Outside estimates of the scope of the greenwashing campaign managed by
BP’s public relations firm Mediashare
are in the tens of millions of
dollars,
the Washington Post’s Krissah Thompson reports:
After the Deepwater Horizon rig exploded in April, BP went on the air
with television ads and bought a series of full-page ads in The
Washington Post, Wall Street Journal and other papers to position
itself as an imperfect but responsible corporation committed to the
cleanup of the gulf. The company has spent $55.8 million on
television and print advertising so far this year, according to the
Nielsen Co., which tracks ad spending.
According to Media Monitors, BP’s radio spots surged to
10,684
last week, with a particular focus on Florida stations. Since mid-July,
BP’s internet ads have been running on political blogs, including
Talking Points Memo, the Common Sense Media network of liberal
sites from FireDogLake to
AmericaBlog, and a host of conservative
sites, including Eagle
Interactive’s
network with RedState and the Salem Web
Network’s
Townhall.com
and Hot Air.
BP seems to be working harder to protect its brand than to help the
people of the Gulf
Coast,
argued Alabama Attorney General Troy King. He has filed suit against
BP
because “while BP is spending millions on print ads and airtime, it’s
not spending what it should on claims.” Fortunately, BP’s control of the
claims process will finally end Monday, with the launch of Kenneth
Feinberg’s Gulf Coast Claims
Facility.