Situation
8 million tons of plastic is
dumped in our ocean each year. Despite the scale of this problem and the
massive areas this plastic is now forming Governments have simply ignored it
and the public are unaware of it.
Brief
Draw the attention to the
unacceptable amounts of plastic in the ocean and make governments take notice
Objectives
Make the public aware of the scale of
the problem.
Get the press and public talking about
the issue.
Get The United Nations to take notice of the campaign.
In the North Pacific there is so
much plastic an area of trash the size of France has formed. Governments have
simply ignored it. So we found a way to ensure they couldn’t. By turning the
country sized trash patch into an official country. On World Oceans Day, 8th
June 2017, The Plastic Oceans Foundation and LadBible submitted an application
to The United Nations to recognise The Trash Isles as an official country.
Because if it is recognised as an official country, then other countries are
obliged to help clean it up. We created an identity for the country and asked the public to support it by becoming citizens.
The Strategy
We needed a way for people to engage with a
problem that sits miles out at sea.
By turning the country sized trash patch into
an official country we not only achieved this but allowed them to understand
the scale of the problem.
Our target audience were
Ladbible’s young, politically active followers. Their online citizenship helped
to spread the word about the campaign via social media. This young audience
have grown up with a much more sustainable outlook on life, knowing they will
have to be the generation that help to solve sustainability issues.
Big name celebrities signed up and helped us reach the full range of our audience, there were environmentalists such as Al Gore and Sir David Attenborough all the way to popular hip hop artist and famous actors such as Pharrell Williams and Chris Hemsworth
Having handed in our application
to the Secretary General of The United Nations on June 8th 2017 we then created a whole range of content to recruit citizens and raise
awareness of the problem – all hosted on The Trash Isles Hub on the homepage of
LADBible,
We had videos solely dedicated to educating
people about the problem, experts in the area shared their stories through
articles and interviews, we had celebrities pledging their support and speaking
up on social media sites. Posters and
web banners asked people to become citizens. All the countries assets, the
money, the passports, the flag and the stamps, were sent to journalists to
build intrigue. And partnering with Change.org we sent out targeted emails to
get people to sign our petition to back the application.
In all, the campaign recruited citizens and raised awareness of the problem not only through LADBible’s extensive network but through millions of earned media impressions.
The Results:
Over 220,000 people signed the
change.org petition and became citizens.
We had 690,000 likes, shares and
comments.
In total The Trash Isles campaign
had over 50 million video views.
Utilising LADBible’s global
network and through earned media we reached half a billion people with the
campaign.
Fox News, CNN, National
Geographic, Europe 1, IBT, Daily Mail, Reuters were just some of the major
networks / papers that covered the campaign.
Big names celebrities in the
category got on-board the campaign including Al Gore and Sir David
Attenborough.
All this led to a comment from
the UN about the campaign and drove the issue to the front of the political
agenda.
In part due to the campaigns’ success plastic in the oceans
has become a big discussion point around the world and 193 countries have
pledged to tackle global crisis of plastic in the oceans at the most recent UN
conference.