The aim of Neste’s campaign was to challenge the future government of Finland to to set ambitious targets for emission reductions. The campaign challenged a group of influencers and the company's President and CEO to take a polygraph test.
The campaign video attracted hundreds of comments in Neste's social media channels. An exceptionally large amount of these comments were negative. Those commenting got provoked by the climate change discussion, as was made clear by such comments as "I will not challenge, stop the climate fuss!", "Oh you are going on about climate change as well. In the future I'll fuel my car elsewhere" and "I have cut your card in half" or "Neste just got boycotted".
Despite of all this Neste wants to talk about climate change.
“We knew that the topic of climate change is likely to cause a stir” said Mika Hyötyläinen, Vice President of Marketing for Marketing & Services business unit at Neste. “However, we had no idea it would create also hate speech and inappropriate comments such as 'Kill yourself you stupid grandma'.
"The recent Finnish Parliamentary Elections were referred to as climate elections, and climate change was clearly one election theme that divided opinions. The polarisation of the conversation was evident in our campaign as well. Our society is changing and companies alongside with it are changing too. An increasing amount of companies are creating solutions and viable business around the challenge of combating climate change, while supporting economic growth and well-being for the whole society. Climate change is the biggest challenge of our times, and therefore it must be talked about, despite the negative comments. Climate change is not waiting for anyone, therefore we need to enable both small and big emissions reducing solutions as soon as they are made available. It would be wonderful if the future government could achieve as many results as possible”.
As well as all the hate speech, Neste encountered other unexpected challenges.
“After launching the campaign we began to feel that our message was not reaching a wider audience” added Hyötyläinen. “We received plenty of comments, but organically the video did not take off as well as our previous ones. After closer investigation, we found out that the algorithms in social media channels censor conversations about climate change. In other words, their visibility is limited due to the sensitive nature of the topic as well as its ability to arouse passions and polarised views. If the world's most sustainable energy company cannot have a conversation like this due to these limitations, then who can?”.
Neste found that in order to keep the conversation on climate change going, it had to launch a censored version of the campaign video (in Finnish). The company intends to assess how well the video performs on social media and report back on the results. In its campaign #Totuudenhetki (moment of truth) Neste invites Finns to challenge the new government to set ambitious climate targets.
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