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‘Misleading’: Gina Rinehart’s mining firm breached environmental code with ‘clean gas’ job ad, panel rules | Australian media newsthirst.


The advertising regulator has found Gina Rinehart’s Hancock Prospecting misled consumers with an unsubstantiated claim that gas was clean, in an online advertisement in The Australian last year.

Ads for Hancock Prospecting’s recruitment webpage futureaustralianjobs.com ran in the digital edition of the Weekend Australian in October 2024.

The ads featured the text: “Our clean gas keeps the lights, and factories, hospitals, and shops open from Tokyo to Toowoomba.”

In its majority decision, upheld on 5 February, the independent regulator said the broader public would understand the word “clean” in this context to mean the energy source “does not produce emissions or have a negative impact on the environment”.

Advertising in Australia is self-regulated. An independent body, Ad Standards, exists to enforce the industry’s voluntary code, and describes its community panel as “the centre piece” of this system.

The panel concluded Hancock Prospecting’s ad had breached two sections of the AANA environmental code: that environmental claims in advertising should “not be misleading or deceptive or be likely to mislead or deceive”; and “be able to be substantiated and verifiable”.

As part of its defence, Hancock Prospecting had said it considered the ad was “truthful and factual” because gas creates less carbon dioxide than coal when burned, was compatible with renewable energy in that output can be adjusted, and created fewer pollutants than coal and oil.

“As a result, Hancock Prospecting’s use of the words ‘our clean gas’ is not misleading or deceptive or likely to mislead or deceive,” the company said. “The facts noted above are supported and substantiated through research and industry experience.”

But the advertiser had provided information on why gas is cleaner than other energy sources, not why it is completely clean, the regulator said.

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“The Panel considered that without further disclaimers explaining the limitations of the word ‘clean’ in this context, the advertisement was misleading or deceptive or likely to mislead or deceive,” it said.

Climate communications group Comms Declare, which made the complaint, said in its submission that gas “emits substantial amounts of environmental pollutants throughout its extraction, transport and when it is burned for energy” and had “substantial negative health impacts”.

Both Hancock Prospecting and The Australian were approached for comment.


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