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Promoting the Apocalypse? The Legality of a Ban on Advertising for Fossil Fuels and Other Carbon-Intensive Products under European Law

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 July 2023

Clemens Kaupa*
Affiliation:
Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam, Amsterdam, The Netherlands
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Abstract

Climate policy requires a steep and rapid reduction of greenhouse gas emissions, which are mainly caused by fossil fuels. Advertising that promotes fossil fuels and other carbon-intensive products undermines this objective. It normalises unsustainable consumption patterns and enables producers of harmful commodities to manipulate public discourse in order to delay or derail the energy transition – for example, by spreading misinformation, deflecting responsibility and promoting false solutions. For these reasons, there are increasing calls for a fossil fuel advertising ban along the lines of the tobacco advertising ban at both the European and the Member State level. This article evaluates the legality of such bans under European law, focusing on legislative competence, fundamental rights and internal market law. It finds that a fossil fuel advertising ban can be assumed to conform to the requirements of European law, especially if it is modelled after the tobacco advertising ban.

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Articles
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This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution and reproduction, provided the original article is properly cited.
Copyright
© The Author(s), 2023. Published by Cambridge University Press

I. Introduction

To limit global warming to 1.5–2.0°C, steep and immediate greenhouse gas (GHG) emission reductions are required. Footnote 1 However, currently implemented climate policies will not deliver these reductions, Footnote 2 and the window of opportunity is rapidly closing. Footnote 3 Much-touted technological solutions such as CO2 removal, hydrogen fuel and electric aviation are at early stages of development, and it is highly uncertain whether they will be deployable at the necessary scale and speed, or at all. Footnote 4 Consequently, interventions to curb demand for fossil fuels and other carbon-intensive products are becoming increasingly central in climate policy. Footnote 5 Demand-side strategies have a significant potential to reduce emissions, estimated at 40–70% by 2050. Footnote 6 Moreover, they can be deployed immediately and can therefore support near-term reduction goals. Footnote 7 They also entail significantly lower uncertainty and fewer environmental risks than new, untried technologies. Footnote 8 Demand-side mitigation strategies comprise measures to avoid demand (eg reducing transportation by aircraft and cars), to shift demand (eg switching to plant-based diets) and to improve efficiency in existing technologies. Footnote 9 Individual behavioural changes are central in these strategies, but they can only translate into aggregate emission reductions if they are embedded in a comprehensive societal transformation that encompasses the technological, the infrastructural, the political and the socio-cultural spheres. Footnote 10

Advertising plays a considerable role in shaping social norms and lifestyle. Footnote 11 It can increase awareness of the climate crisis and challenge materialistic values. Footnote 12 Much more frequently, however, advertising promotes and normalises unsustainable, carbon-intensive consumption patterns. Footnote 13 Moreover, the fossil fuel industry and other producers of carbon-intensive products use advertising to exert political influence, to manipulate media reporting, to deflect corporate responsibility and to spread misinformation about climate science, with the aim of derailing or delaying the energy transition. Footnote 14 These practices are increasingly coming under criticism from a wide range of stakeholders, including public health professionals and environmental organisations. Footnote 15 They have also become the target of a growing number of legal challenges. Multiple lawsuits in the USA maintain that major fossil fuel companies have deceived the public about the climate harm of their products by means of advertising. Footnote 16 Court actions against Total in France and KLM in the Netherlands hold that the undertakings are misleading consumers with implausible marketing claims on their transition plans and by promoting false solutions to the climate crisis. Footnote 17 Decisions by the Dutch advertising authority have established that Shell incorrectly promoted itself as a “driver of the energy transition” and misled consumers by maintaining that carbon offsets could neutralise the harm from driving with fossil fuels. Footnote 18

Research indicates that advertising restrictions can help reduce emissions. Footnote 19 Moreover, they can act as a “social tipping intervention” (ie an intervention that triggers the rapid transition to a state of net zero emissions). Footnote 20 Municipalities such as Amsterdam and Sydney have already enacted local measures to ban advertising for fossil fuels and other carbon-intensive products from city-owned advertising spaces, most notably in public transport. Footnote 21 There are also growing calls for a legislative ban, often inspired by the example of the ban on tobacco advertising. Between 2021 and 2022, a European Citizen Initiative (ECI) collected 280,000 signatures in support of such a ban, though the number fell short of the threshold that would require the European Commission to formally engage with the proposal. Footnote 22 In 2022, France passed the first legislative ban on advertising for fossil fuel products. Footnote 23 National campaigns to enact bans are ongoing in various countries, such as the Netherlands. Footnote 24

Different design options for a ban exist. The French ban only covers the direct promotion of fossil fuels. It does not prohibit fossil fuel companies from engaging in image advertising or sponsorship, which significantly limits the effectiveness of the ban. Footnote 25 By contrast, the ECI sought a quasi-comprehensive ban that also included a prohibition of indirectly promoting fossil fuels (ie image- or advocacy-related advertising and sponsorship), as well as a ban on advertising for fossil fuel-powered products such as aviation and cars.

Advertising restrictions are a common regulatory tool to curb the effects of harmful products and communication practices. At the European Union (EU) level, multiple advertising bans are in place, ranging from the general prohibition of misleading advertising under the Unfair Commercial Practices Directive (UCPD) to various product-related restrictions. Among the most comprehensive advertising bans enacted by the EU is that for tobacco products. The tobacco advertising ban has been subject to numerous legal challenges under European law, ultimately weathering most of them. Building on this experience, the present article will evaluate the legality of a ban on advertising for fossil fuels and other carbon-intensive products (the “fossil fuel advertising ban”) under European law. It addresses, first, the legislative competence of the Member States and the EU to enact such a ban. Second, it analyses the effects of an advertising ban on the freedoms of commercial speech and to conduct a business. And third, it evaluates the effects of a national advertising ban on the free movement of goods and the freedom to provide and receive services, which are protected by internal market law. The article concludes that a fossil fuel advertising ban will likely conform to the requirements of European law, especially if it is modelled after the tobacco advertising ban.

The article is structured as follows: Section II discusses the objectives of a fossil fuel advertising ban. This helps determine the legislative competence of the Member States and the EU to enact such a ban, and it is also relevant in the context of the proportionality analysis. It will be shown that a fossil fuel advertising ban has multiple objectives, namely the protection of health, the environment, consumers and the democratic process. Section III provides an overview of existing advertising restrictions in the EU. Section IV examines parallels between tobacco and fossil fuel advertising. It will show that the two are comparable in important aspects. Section V provides an overview over the legal framework of tobacco advertising regulation. Section VI scrutinises the legality of a fossil fuel advertising ban under European law from different perspectives. Section VII concludes.

II. The objectives of a ban on fossil fuel advertising

A fossil fuel advertising ban pursues three central objectives. Footnote 26 First, it aims to reduce the consumption of fossil fuels and other carbon-intensive products, which cause major harm to health and the environment. Fossil fuel combustion is responsible for up to 10 million deaths globally per year as a result of air pollution. Footnote 27 In the EU, the number of deaths caused by air pollution is estimated at 660,000 per year. Footnote 28 More than half of these deaths could be avoided by eliminating emissions from fossil fuel combustion. Footnote 29 Furthermore, fossil fuels cause over two-thirds of total GHG emissions and are therefore the main drivers of climate change. Footnote 30 It is estimated that an average of 250,000 deaths per year will be caused by climate-sensitive diseases and conditions, such as malaria, heat, childhood undernutrition and diarrhoea, by 2050. Footnote 31 Due to its severe health impacts, the climate crisis is increasingly being conceptualised as a public health crisis, with fossil fuels as its dominant cause. Footnote 32 Moreover, GHG emissions already inflict enormous environmental harm, such as irreversible ecosystem loss and the widespread extinction of species. Footnote 33 An aggressive phase-out of fossil fuels will therefore have major health and environmental benefits. Footnote 34 Advertising normalises the continued use of fossil fuels and promotes the consumption of carbon-intensive products. Footnote 35 It reinforces existing behavioural patterns and undermines a sense of urgency in implementing behavioural changes, thereby contributing to the carbon lock-in. Footnote 36 Advertising regulation constitutes an important measure to reduce carbon-intensive consumption. Footnote 37 According to Otto et al, a fossil fuel advertising ban can contribute to the public recognition of the “immoral character of fossil fuels”. Footnote 38 This constitutes an important “social tipping intervention”, which describes a relatively small policy change that can trigger a systemic transformation.

Second, a fossil fuel advertising ban aims to protect consumers and ensure the effective functioning of markets in the context of the energy transition. Advertising misleads consumers about the adverse effects of fossil fuels and about the damaging role that fossil fuel companies play in the transition. As fossil fuel advertising normalises the continued consumption of fossil fuels despite the fact that an urgent phase-out is required, it is misleading by default. Footnote 39 Misleading marketing claims directly harm the interests of consumers, as correct and non-deceptive product information is necessary for informed and thus efficient consumer choice. Footnote 40 Indirectly, they also harm the interests of competitors, such as providers of genuinely sustainable energy. Footnote 41 Fossil fuel advertising thereby contributes to market failure in the context of the energy transition. Footnote 42 Deceptive fossil fuel advertising practices are increasingly targeted by lawsuits in both the USA and Europe. In the EU, misleading advertising is prohibited under the UCPD. However, the UCPD relies on ex-post, case-by-case enforcement, which is ineffective in the face of systematically deceptive advertising. A fossil fuel advertising ban can address the problem of systematic consumer deception in an effective manner and thereby contribute to the efficient functioning of markets in the context of the energy transition. Footnote 43

Third, a fossil fuel advertising ban seeks to protect public discourse and the democratic process from misinformation and corporate manipulation. Through advertising and other public relations (PR) instruments, the fossil fuel industry has systematically driven climate change misinformation and stoked widespread science scepticism. Footnote 44 It continually misrepresents its role in the climate crisis and promotes false solutions. Brulle et al state in this regard: “Sophisticated propaganda campaigns designed to manipulate public and elite perceptions of the major oil companies are a significant barrier to meaningful climate action.” Footnote 45 Fossil fuel advertising also manipulates media reporting. According to the latest Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) report, “[f]ossil fuel industries have unique access to mainstream media via advertisements, shaping narratives of media reports, and exerting political influence”. Footnote 46 Research shows that fossil fuel advertising can significantly shape the editorial stance of media companies on energy issues. Footnote 47 It can also influence how readers perceive reporting on climate-related issues and thereby counteract its effects. Footnote 48 Citizens who receive mixed messages about fossil fuels and other carbon-intensive products may react with disengagement. Footnote 49 Misinformation about the climate crisis and how to address it can thus significantly undermine public discourse at a time when crucial but difficult decisions on climate change mitigation are on the agenda.

By promoting products that significantly damage health and the environment, by systematically deceiving consumers and by undermining the democratic process, fossil fuel advertising violates central legal obligations and public policy objectives of the EU and the Member States. EU law prescribes a high level of protection of health, the environment and consumers and is based on the democratic principle. Footnote 50 Moreover, the EU has bound itself to an emission reduction target of at least 55% by 2030. Footnote 51 Advertising that promotes and normalises the continued consumption of fossil fuels and other carbon-intensive products stands in direct conflict with this obligation. A failure to regulate fossil fuel advertising also violates other important legal requirements. Most notably, human rights law requires governments to take appropriate action in order to protect their citizens from the dangers of climate change. Footnote 52 Governments are also under an obligation to protect its citizens from adverse health impacts, including those caused by corporations promoting harmful commodities. Footnote 53 A fossil fuel advertising ban prevents corporate activities that are manifestly in conflict with central objectives of the EU and the Member States.

Summing up, a fossil fuel advertising ban aims to achieve multiple objectives, namely the protection of health and the environment, consumers and the democratic process. Moreover, it seeks to ensure that fossil fuel advertising does not counteract important public policy objectives of the EU.

III. Advertising restrictions in the EU and the Member States

Advertising restrictions are a common regulatory tool to curb the harmful impact of products and communication practices. At the EU level, multiple advertising bans are in place. The EU Community code relating to medicinal products for human use prohibits advertising of prescription medicine Footnote 54 and also authorises Member States to ban advertising for medicinal products if they are reimbursed. Footnote 55 The Audiovisual Media Services Directive (AVMSD) restricts advertising for alcohol on television. Footnote 56 It also bans commercial communications that “prejudice respect for human dignity”, “include or promote any discrimination based on sex, racial or ethnic origin, nationality, religion or belief, disability, age or sexual orientation” or encourage behaviour “prejudicial to health or safety” or “grossly prejudicial to the protection of the environment”. Footnote 57 The Food Information Regulation bans misleading food information in advertising, Footnote 58 and so does the Regulation on nutrition and health claims made on foods. Footnote 59 Finally, the UCPD prohibits advertising that misleads consumers. The UCPD is not limited to any specific products and instead applies to all marketing claims that are false or otherwise deceptive and are liable to influence consumer behaviour. Footnote 60 At the Member State level, advertising restrictions exist, inter alia, for products such as alcohol, gambling and betting. Footnote 61

For the purposes of this article, the most important advertising restriction is that for tobacco products. Its relevance is twofold: first, it is often cited as a model for a fossil fuel advertising ban, and therefore it provides an idea of how a future legislative proposal for a fossil fuel advertising ban might look. Second, the tobacco advertising ban has been subject to numerous legal challenges. The case law helps us to evaluate the legality of a fossil fuel advertising ban, in particular if it is modelled after the tobacco advertising ban.

IV. Comparing tobacco and fossil fuel advertising

This section assesses the parallels between tobacco and fossil fuel advertising. They can be compared on at least three levels: the harm caused by the promoted products, the multifactorial mechanisms that cause this harm to be so widespread and the role that advertising plays in them.

First, tobacco and fossil fuels can be compared in terms of the harm caused. Both commodities have significant negative effects on public health. Smoking is responsible for 8 million deaths globally per year, of which 1.2 million deaths are from second-hand smoke. Footnote 62 As discussed, the health impact of fossil fuels is of a similar or greater magnitude. Moreover, both tobacco and fossil fuels have major adverse environmental effects. Footnote 63 Finally, fossil fuels and tobacco are also highly damaging in economic terms. The yearly economic loss caused by tobacco is estimated to be 1.8% of global gross domestic product. Footnote 64 Climate change will cause major economic losses, with 35–132 million people pushed into extreme poverty by 2030. Footnote 65

A second point of comparison concerns the mechanisms by which tobacco and fossil fuels cause such widespread harm. The global tobacco epidemic has been found to have multiple causes and contributing factors. At its basis lies smoking addiction, which has a pharmacokinetic and a behavioural dimension. Footnote 66 The former refers to the way nicotine is processed by the body. It is intentionally exploited by the tobacco industry through the design of cigarettes, which have been described as “a very efficient and highly engineered drug-delivery system”. Footnote 67 The behavioural dimension of smoking addiction concerns cues associated with pleasurable effects, which are also intentionally exploited. Footnote 68 Social, political and economic factors further contribute to the smoking epidemic. Social factors concern the acceptability and desirability of smoking, which are influenced by marketing. Political factors include issues such as smoking policies and legislation, as well as public support for the industry – for example, in the form of subsidies for tobacco farming or government support for trade deregulation. Footnote 69 Finally, economic considerations drive the tobacco industry to intentionally expand existing and develop new markets for their products. Footnote 70 The tobacco industry has also used its economic power to lobby and litigate vigorously against regulation and to deceive the public about the harm caused by its products. Footnote 71

The global overconsumption of fossil fuels also has multiple causes and contributing factors. At its core lies the role of fossil fuels as the dominant source of energy production. Energy demand is a function of social practices, Footnote 72 which are increasingly conceptualised in analogy to substance dependence. Footnote 73 For example, the compulsive overuse of electronic devices, which is the result of intentional design choices, is described as “digital addiction”. Footnote 74 Digital services, in turn, are a significant driver of growth in global energy demand. Footnote 75 Technological, social, institutional and economic factors contribute to the overconsumption of fossil fuels, creating and stabilising the “carbon lock-in”. Footnote 76 Technological lock-in is caused by historical design choices, such as the development of highway networks or the deterioration of railroads, which complicate the adoption of efficient, low-carbon solutions such as public transport. Social institutions and customs create a social lock-in, reinforcing carbon-intensive consumption patterns. Footnote 77 Political institutions contribute to an institutional lock-in – for example, by subsidising carbon-intensive industries. Finally, an economic lock-in is created by undertakings continuing to operate in their carbon-intensive business models. Highly polluting industries such as the fossil fuel, car and aviation industries put considerable financial means into lobbying, marketing and litigation to protect and expand their markets. The fossil fuel industry in particular has actively resisted the energy transition for decades. Footnote 78

While the pharmacokinetic dimension of nicotine addiction is an important element fuelling the tobacco epidemic that is not of relevance in the context of fossil fuels, the multifactorial processes that magnify the harm caused by the two commodities are similar in important respects. This parallel has long been highlighted, most notably by the public health community. Footnote 79 For example, the 2022 Lancet Report on Health and Climate Change speaks of “fossil fuel dependence”, Footnote 80 and World Health Organization (WHO) Director Tedros Ghebreyesus called for “transformative solutions to wean the world off its addiction to fossil fuels”. Footnote 81 Along similar lines, United Nations (UN) Secretary-General António Guterres demanded an “end our global addiction to fossil fuels”. Footnote 82

A third point of comparison is the role that advertising plays in the process of magnifying the harm caused by the two commodities. Advertising has long been held to be a central driver of the tobacco epidemic. Footnote 83 Tobacco advertising aims to create positive cues for cigarettes Footnote 84 and to maintain the social acceptability of smoking. Footnote 85 Tobacco advertising also influences political processes, as well as media reporting. Finally, tobacco advertising plays a key role in deceiving the public about the harms of smoking. Footnote 86 Advertising by the fossil fuel and other carbon-intensive industries similarly seeks to create positive cues for their products, thereby stimulating demand and normalising their consumption. The fossil fuel industry also uses advertising to spread misinformation about climate science, to mislead about the harm caused by their products and its role in the energy transition and to influence media and political processes. Research shows that the PR strategies employed by the fossil fuel industry mirror those of the tobacco industry in important respects. Footnote 87 For example, both the tobacco and the fossil fuel industries have been found to systematically target children and education. Footnote 88 The role that advertising plays in amplifying the harm caused by the two commodities is therefore largely comparable.

The preceding overview shows that important parallels between tobacco and fossil fuel advertising can be identified. This suggests that the tobacco advertising ban may serve as a plausible model for a fossil fuel advertising ban and also that the case law on the former is relevant for evaluating the legality of the latter. It is sometimes pointed out that the two commodities also differ in important respects. Footnote 89 Most importantly, tobacco use serves no socially justifiable need, whereas fossil fuels are important energy sources. Footnote 90 However, a ban on advertising for fossil fuels and other carbon-intensive products does not prevent their sale. Consequently, the difference is not of significance for the purposes of this article.

V. The legal framework of tobacco advertising regulation

1. WHO Framework Convention on Tobacco Control

At the international level, a tobacco advertising ban is prescribed by the WHO Framework Convention on Tobacco Control (FCTC), which was adopted in 2003. Footnote 91 The objective of the FCTC is “to reduce continually and substantially the prevalence of tobacco use and exposure to tobacco smoke” and thereby to “protect present and future generations from the devastating health, social, environmental and economic consequences of tobacco consumption and exposure to tobacco smoke”. Footnote 92

The FCTC takes a comprehensive approach to the regulation of tobacco, encompassing measures to reduce both supply and demand. Supply-related measures concern the illicit trade in tobacco products, sales to and by minors and the provision of support for economically viable alternative activities for tobacco farmers. Footnote 93 Demand measures include price and tax measures, the protection from exposure to tobacco smoke, the regulation of the contents of tobacco products and of tobacco product disclosures, the packaging and labelling of tobacco products, education, communication, training and public awareness and demand reduction measures concerning tobacco dependence and cessation. The FCTC explicitly states that tobacco control policy must be protected from the influence of the tobacco industry. The Preamble identifies “the need to be alert to any efforts by the tobacco industry to undermine or subvert tobacco control efforts”. Footnote 94

The regulation of advertising, promotion and sponsorship plays an important role in the comprehensive approach to tobacco control taken by the FCTC. It is considered a demand-oriented measure, though it is sometimes also viewed as a supply-side instrument, as it concerns actions of the tobacco industry. Footnote 95 Article 13(2) FCTC holds that “[e]ach Party shall … undertake a comprehensive ban of all tobacco advertising, promotion and sponsorship”. The requirement is developed in more detail in implementation guidelines. Footnote 96 They specify that an effective, comprehensive ban should cover all tobacco advertising, promotion and sponsorship and all forms of communications or contributions that have the aim, effect or likely effect to directly or indirectly promote tobacco use. Footnote 97 It should “address all persons or entities involved in the production, placement and/or dissemination of tobacco advertising, promotion and sponsorship”. Footnote 98 The guidelines emphasise that “contemporary marketing communication involves an integrated approach” that covers all forms of advertising and promotion. Consequently, a limited advertising ban will easily be circumvented, as “the tobacco industry inevitably shifts its expenditure”. Footnote 99 The ban should cover “advertising and promotion of tobacco brand names and all corporate promotion” (ie corporate image advertising even if it does not seem to promote a specific product). The ban should also include “brand stretching”, which “occurs when a tobacco brand name, emblem, trademark, logo or trade insignia or any other distinctive feature … is connected with a non-tobacco product or service in such a way that the tobacco product and the non-tobacco product or service are likely to be associated”. Footnote 100 The guidelines emphasise that the harmful effect of tobacco advertising goes beyond the direct promotion of tobacco products. Instead, its harm lies in “giving the impression that tobacco use is socially acceptable”. Footnote 101

The guidelines also recommend that governments “should ban contributions from tobacco companies to any other entity for ‘socially responsible causes’, as this is a form of sponsorship”. Footnote 102 It further explains: “It is increasingly common for tobacco companies to seek to portray themselves as good corporate citizens by making contributions to deserving causes or by otherwise promoting ‘socially responsible’ elements of their business practices.” Footnote 103 And: “Tobacco companies may also seek to engage in ‘socially responsible’ business practices (such as good employee–employer relations or environmental stewardship), which do not involve contributions to other parties. Promotion to the public of such otherwise commendable activities should be prohibited, as their aim, effect or likely effect is to promote a tobacco product or tobacco use either directly or indirectly.” Footnote 104

2. The tobacco advertising ban in the EU and in the Member States

Tobacco advertising has been subject to restrictions in Europe for more than half a century. Italy passed the first tobacco advertising ban in 1962. Footnote 105 Comprehensive bans were first enacted in the early 1970s by Finland, Iceland and Norway. Footnote 106 From the 1980s onwards, European countries adopted increasingly stringent restrictions, though with significant differences between them. Footnote 107 The first EU-wide ban on tobacco advertising and sponsorship, limited to television, was enacted by the Television without Frontiers Directive (1989). Footnote 108 It was complemented a decade later by the Tobacco Advertising Directive I, which established a comprehensive ban for all remaining forms of such advertising, ranging from print media, radio and the Internet to billboards and tobacco brand logos on ashtrays and parasols. Footnote 109 However, the Directive was successfully challenged by the German government, under the influence of the tobacco industry. Footnote 110 In the judgment Tobacco Advertising I (2000), the Court of Justice of the European Union (CJEU) ruled that a ban extending to advertising with no cross-border effects exceeded the EU’s legislative competence under Article 114 TFEU. Footnote 111 That provision, which will be discussed in more detail in a later section, allows for the harmonisation of national laws, but only to the extent that this is necessary for the functioning of the internal market. As a consequence, the more limited Tobacco Advertising Directive II was enacted in 2003. Footnote 112 A further legal challenge against this measure failed (Tobacco Advertising II, 2006). Footnote 113

Today, the three central instruments of tobacco advertising regulation at the EU level are the Tobacco Advertising Directive II, the Audiovisual Media Services Directive (AVMSD) and the Tobacco Products Directive. The AVMSD lays down a comprehensive ban on tobacco advertising on television, prohibiting “all forms of audiovisual commercial communications for cigarettes and other tobacco products”. Footnote 114 According to its preamble, this includes indirect advertising that does not directly mention a tobacco product but contains brand names and symbols “of tobacco products or of undertakings whose known or main activities include the production or sale of such products”. Footnote 115 Consequently, corporate image advertising is also included in the ban. The AVMSD also bans sponsorship “by undertakings whose principal activity is the manufacture or sale of cigarettes and other tobacco products”. Footnote 116

The Tobacco Advertising Directive II covers advertising in print media, on the radio and online. Footnote 117 As a consequence of the Tobacco Advertising I judgment, advertising without a significant cross-border relevance is not covered. This includes advertising on billboards and in cinemas. The Directive lays down a near-comprehensive ban on tobacco advertising, exempting only advertising in tobacco trade journals, as well as print media from third countries not intended for the Union market. Footnote 118 The term “advertising” describes “any form of commercial communications with the aim or direct or indirect effect of promoting a tobacco product”, Footnote 119 and therefore it also covers corporate image advertising. The Directive also prohibits sponsorship of events that take place in multiple Member States or that have a cross-border effect, such as international sporting or cultural events. Finally, the Tobacco Products Directive lays down a near-comprehensive advertising ban for electronic cigarettes, following the approach of the Tobacco Advertising Directive II and the AVMSD. Footnote 120

The Member States retain discretion to regulate advertising in the areas not covered by the EU measures. This essentially concerns forms of advertising with no significant cross-border effect, such as billboards. Most Member States have also enacted comprehensive advertising bans in these areas, as required by the FCTC. Footnote 121

Summing up, it has been shown that advertising restrictions form an integral part of the system of tobacco control established by the FCTC. The convention is adamant that the influence of the tobacco industry on policymaking and public discourse must be contained as much as possible. Consequently, tobacco advertising restrictions are comprehensive in their scope, prohibiting both direct promotion of tobacco products as well as indirect advertising, including image and advocacy advertising and sponsorship.

VI. The legality of a fossil fuel advertising ban

This section evaluates the legality of a fossil fuel advertising ban under European law from different perspectives. It first examines the competence of the EU and the Member States to enact such a ban. It then analyses the effects of an advertising ban on the freedoms of commercial speech and to conduct a business. Finally, it evaluates the effects of a national advertising ban on the free movement of goods and the freedom to provide and receive services that are protected under internal market law.

1. The legislative competence of the EU and the Member States to enact a fossil fuel advertising ban

Depending on the subject area, the competence to enact legislation is either held exclusively by the EU or the Member States or is shared between them. Footnote 122 As discussed earlier, a fossil fuel advertising ban aims at the protection of health, the environment, consumers and the democratic process. The competence to legislate in the fields of environmental and consumer protection is shared between the EU and the Member States. Footnote 123 This means that both the EU and the Member States can enact legislation in these fields, though the latter can do so only to the extent that the matter has not been comprehensively regulated at the European level. Footnote 124 By contrast, the competence to legislate in the field of health lies with the Member States. Footnote 125 However, national health regulation can be harmonised at the EU level if necessary for the functioning of the internal market, as will be discussed further below. Finally, the protection of the democratic process is a procedural objective that both the EU and the Member States must pursue within their respective areas of competence.

As mentioned earlier, the EU has already enacted a significant number of advertising restrictions. Most of them are based on Article 114 TFEU. Footnote 126 The provision authorises the European legislators to harmonise national norms if the European measure has as its “object the establishment and functioning of the internal market”. The CJEU has interpreted the requirement in Tobacco Advertising I as meaning that the measure must contribute to the elimination of obstacles to the exercise of the economic freedoms guaranteed by the EU’s internal market rules or remove appreciable distortions of competition in the internal market. Footnote 127 Article 114 TFEU is not restricted to a specific subject area. Instead, it authorises harmonising measures in any regulatory field, as long as the European measure creates or improves the internal market. This includes measures in the fields of health, environmental protection and consumer law. Footnote 128

In evaluating whether a measure meets the requirements of Article 114 TFEU, the CJEU usually grants a broad scope of discretion to the European legislator. Footnote 129 It authorises the use of Article 114 TFEU not only in situations where differences between national measures already obstruct the internal market, but also for “preventive harmonization” Footnote 130 (ie to prevent the future emergence of obstacles, provided that this is a likely prospect Footnote 131 ). At the same time, the scope of Article 114 TFEU is not limitless, as the CJEU emphasised in Tobacco Advertising I. The European legislator must provide a plausible justification of how an advertising restriction serves the objective of Article 114 TFEU. This is illustrated by the reasons given by the European legislator for the bans contained in the Tobacco Advertising Directive II. According to its preamble, the ban on advertising in print media is justified on the ground that it ensures the cross-border circulation of these media products. Footnote 132 The ban on sponsorship with cross-border relevance serves to eliminate distortions of competition. Footnote 133 Finally, the ban on tobacco advertising on the radio and online is justified on the ground that “[t]obacco advertising by both these media has, by its very nature, a cross-border character, and should be regulated at Community level”. Footnote 134 The CJEU confirmed in Tobacco Advertising II that these reasons are valid. Footnote 135

Importantly, European legislation must conform to the principle of proportionality. Footnote 136 It requires that the measure is appropriate for attaining the objectives pursued by the legislation and does not exceed the limits of what is necessary. Footnote 137 When there is a choice between several appropriate measures, the least onerous must be chosen, and the disadvantages caused must not be disproportionate to the aims pursued. When evaluating the proportionality of European legislation, attention must be paid to the fact that European law requires a high level of protection in the areas of health, environment and consumer rights. Footnote 138 Moreover, the precautionary principle authorises the European legislator to take action if there is a likelihood of real harm to health and the environment, even though the scientific evidence does not allow for determining this risk with certainty. Footnote 139 In the presence of scientific evidence indicating the existence of potential risks, the European legislator may be required to act to ensure a high level of protection. Footnote 140 In the light of these requirements, the CJEU typically grants a broad scope of discretion to the European legislator when evaluating the proportionality of a measure. Footnote 141 It usually limits itself to scrutinising whether the measure does not manifestly exceed the limits of what is necessary in order to achieve the objective pursued by the measure in question. Footnote 142 In judgments such as Société Neptune Distribution, Deutsches Weintor and Pillbox 38, the CJEU found that restrictions on labelling and advertising were justifiable on grounds of protecting public health and proportional to the objective. Footnote 143 In the latter case, the CJEU found the advertising ban on electronic cigarettes laid down in the Tobacco Products Directive to be proportionate, reasoning that an advertising ban “means that consumers … are confronted with fewer commercial inducements to purchase and consume electronic cigarettes with the result that they are less exposed to the identified or potential risks to human health to which those products could give rise”. Footnote 144

A fossil fuel advertising ban can be based on Article 114 TFEU if it is necessary for the functioning of the internal market as defined in the CJEU’s case law. This can plausibly be argued: differences in the regulation of fossil fuel advertising between the Member States already exist, since France has enacted a ban in 2022. The adoption of further restrictions by the Member States is likely, especially given that demand-reduction strategies are increasingly playing a central role in climate policy. In determining whether a fossil fuel advertising ban is proportional to the pursued objectives, it must be considered that existing mitigation measures are insufficient in the light of the Paris objectives. It therefore cannot be assumed that an advertising ban exceeds what is necessary, especially given the EU’s obligation to achieve a high level of protection of health, the environment and consumers. An advertising ban can also be considered as a less restrictive alternative to a sales ban on fossil fuels or other carbon-intensive products. Finally, the experience of tobacco control shows that an advertising ban must be comprehensive, as otherwise it is easy to circumvent. Consequently, a merely partial ban cannot be assumed to be a less restrictive alternative to a full ban.

Within the scope of shared competences, Member States remain competent to legislate in areas that have not been comprehensively harmonised by the EU. For example, various Member States have enacted advertising restrictions on products such as alcohol, gambling and betting. Footnote 145 As the EU has not yet harmonised rules on fossil fuel advertising, Member States remain competent to legislate in that area. National advertising bans must be designed in a way that does not unduly restrict the economic freedoms guaranteed by EU internal market law. This issue will be discussed in more detail further below.

Summing up, both the EU and the Member States are competent to enact a fossil fuel advertising ban. Article 114 TFEU provides a viable legal basis for such a ban at the EU level.

2. Freedom of commercial speech

The freedom of expression is protected under Article 10 European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR) and Article 11 Fundamental Rights Charter (FRC).

The ECHR binds the institutions of the Member States, all of which are parties to the Convention. According to the case law of the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR), the protection of the freedom of speech under Article 10 ECHR extends to commercial speech, including advertising. Footnote 146 Advertising restrictions can therefore violate Article 10 ECHR. However, the protection of the freedom of speech is not absolute. According to Article 10(2) ECHR, freedom of speech can be restricted if three conditions are met. First, the restriction must be prescribed by law. Second, the restriction must pursue a legitimate aim. Policy objectives that can justify restrictions of the freedom of expression are listed exhaustively in Article 10(2) ECHR, and they include the protection of health and of the rights of others. Third, the restriction must be “necessary in a democratic society”. According to the ECtHR, this implies the existence of a “pressing social need” Footnote 147 and the proportionality of the measure to the aim pursued. National authorities must give “relevant and sufficient” reasons to justify the restriction. Footnote 148 When evaluating the proportionality of a general measure, the ECtHR primarily assesses the underlying legislative choices. Footnote 149 According to the Court, the “quality of the parliamentary and judicial review of the necessity of the measure is of particular importance in this respect, including to the operation of the relevant margin of appreciation”. Footnote 150 And: “[T]he more convincing the general justifications for the general measure are, the less importance the Court will attach to its impact in the particular case.” Footnote 151 The central question to be answered is not whether less restrictive measures are available to the legislator. Instead, “the core issue is whether, in adopting the general measure and striking the balance it did, the legislature acted within the margin of appreciation afforded to it”. Footnote 152

The ECtHR affords a significantly lower level of protection to commercial speech than to political speech. Footnote 153 National authorities have a broad margin of discretion in enacting restrictions to commercial speech, as the judgment markt intern Verlag GmbH and Klaus Beermann (1989) illustrates. Footnote 154 It dealt with the case of a trade journal that had published negative and unproven information about a company and had been convicted of dishonest trade practices under the German Unfair Competition Act. The ECtHR ruled that the judgment did not violate Article 10 ECHR. The ECtHR accepted that the national rule could be justified as a measure protecting the reputation and the rights of others, which is one of the grounds listed in Article 10(2) ECHR. Footnote 155 Concerning the necessity of the measure, the Court held that national authorities have to weigh the competing interests at stake. Footnote 156 It emphasised that the national authorities have a significant margin of appreciation in conducting this balancing exercise: “Such a margin of appreciation is essential in commercial matters and, in particular, in an area as complex and fluctuating as that of unfair competition.” Footnote 157

The broad margin of appreciation extends to advertising restrictions. This is illustrated by the judgment Casado Coca v Spain (1994), which dealt with rules of the Spanish bar association prohibiting advertising by lawyers and which were found not to violate Article 10 ECHR. Footnote 158 The ECtHR accepted that the restrictions were “designed to protect the interests of the public while ensuring respect for members of the Bar” and therefore justifiable under Article 10(2) ECHR. Footnote 159 Regarding the necessity of the restrictions, the Court emphasised the broad margin of appreciation left to national authorities. Footnote 160 While advertising may benefit citizens “a means of discovering the characteristics of services and goods offered”, it “may sometimes be restricted, especially to prevent unfair competition and untruthful or misleading advertising”. Footnote 161 Moreover, “[i]n some contexts, the publication of even objective, truthful advertisements might be restricted in order to ensure respect for the rights of others or owing to the special circumstances of particular business activities and professions”. Footnote 162 Given that there is no European consensus on the matter, the margin of appreciation is particularly broad. Footnote 163

Restrictions on advertising can violate Article 10 ECHR if the national authorities fail to strike a fair balance between the affected interests. This is illustrated by the case Sekmadienis Ltd. v. Lithuania (2018), which dealt with a decision prohibiting advertising of a clothing company referring to religious figures as contrary to public morals. Footnote 164 According to the ECtHR, the national authorities had granted absolute primacy to protecting the feelings of religious people, without adequately taking the advertiser’s freedom of expression into account. Footnote 165

The ECtHR had to deal with national restrictions on tobacco advertising in the cases Société de conception de presse et dʼédition et Ponson v. France and Hachette Filipacchi Presse Automobile et Dupuy c. France (2009). Footnote 166 Two magazines had published photographs of race car driver Michael Schumacher. In the photographs the logo of his sponsor, Marlboro, a tobacco brand, was visible. One photograph caption also referred to the driver’s wealth. The magazines were fined for violating the French Loi Evin, which prohibits the promotion of tobacco products. The ECtHR noted that tobacco advertising restrictions formed an essential part of the broader tobacco control strategy and highlighted the importance of protecting public health “from the scourge of smoking”. Footnote 167 The Court held that the impact of promoting tobacco in the context of sport and success, particularly on young people, must be taken into account. Footnote 168 The Court also noted that the magazines could have easily avoided a fine by blurring the logo on the photographs. Footnote 169 The ECtHR concluded that the measures responded to a pressing social need and were not disproportionate to the legitimate aim pursued. Footnote 170 They could be considered “necessary in a democratic society” and therefore did not violate Article 10 ECHR. It is interesting to note that, according to the ECtHR, it is not necessary to determine the actual impact of advertising on consumption when evaluating the proportionality of the advertising restriction. The fact that the communications were likely to incite people and especially the young to smoke was considered a “relevant and sufficient” reason to justify the restriction. Footnote 171

The FRC applies to the acts of EU institutions, including legislative acts. Moreover, it applies to Member States “when they are implementing Union law”. Footnote 172 The latter requirement has been interpreted expansively by the CJEU. Whenever a national measure is challenged as a restriction of the economic freedoms protected under internal market law and the Member State seeks to justify it on overriding reasons in the public interest, the measure is considered to implement Union law. Footnote 173 Given that the scope of internal market law itself is broad, this means that most if not all national measures regulating advertising will fall under Article 11 FRC. Article 11 FRC corresponds to Article 10 ECHR, having the same meaning and scope. Footnote 174 Like Article 10 ECHR, the freedom of expression protected by Article 11 FRC can be limited. Restrictions must be provided for by law and protect the essence of the freedom of expression. Footnote 175 Moreover, they are subject to the requirement of proportionality, which means that they must be necessary and genuinely meet objectives of general interest recognised by the Union or the need to protect the rights and freedoms of others.

According to the CJEU’s case law, the essence of the freedom of expression is not affected by labelling and advertising restrictions if it is limited to a clearly defined area and does not make communications about product information impossible. Footnote 176 In evaluating whether a restriction is proportional, the Court scrutinises whether a “fair balance” has been struck between the various fundamental rights affected and the legitimate general interest objectives that the measure seeks to advance. Footnote 177 Both European and national legislators enjoy a margin of discretion in determining whether there is a pressing social need that may justify a restriction on the freedom of expression. Footnote 178 In Société Neptune Distribution, which dealt with food labelling restrictions, the CJEU held that the goal of ensuring that consumers have the most accurate and transparent information is closely related to the protection of health and can consequently justify limitations on the freedom of expression. Footnote 179 In Philip Morris Brands SARL (2016), the CJEU had to evaluate whether labelling restrictions under the Tobacco Products Directive violated Article 11 FRC. The Directive bans a significant list of elements from cigarette packets, including features that promote a tobacco product by creating an erroneous impression about its characteristics or health effects, suggest that the product has various benefits or refer to flavourings. Footnote 180 According to the CJEU, the freedom of the undertaking to disseminate information in pursuit of its commercial interests is outweighed by the objective of ensuring a high level of protection of health. The presence of mandatory health warnings on the packet does not negate the necessity to enact further measures. In fact, marketing claims that suggest some benefits of tobacco products can undermine consumer awareness of the risks associated with smoking. Footnote 181

A fossil fuel advertising ban restricts the freedom of commercial speech. However, the restriction can be justified on grounds of the protection of health, the environment, consumers and the democratic process, all of which form important objectives of the EU. The example of tobacco advertising regulation shows that even a near-comprehensive advertising ban can be considered proportional in the light of important public interests. Given that tobacco and fossil fuel advertising are comparable in important aspects, the same considerations apply for a fossil fuel advertising ban.

3. Freedom to conduct a business

Article 16 FRC recognises the “freedom to conduct a business in accordance with Union law and national laws and practices”. It covers the freedom to exercise an economic or commercial activity, freedom of contract and free competition. Footnote 182 Moreover, it includes the right to freely use the economic, technical and financial resources available to the undertaking. Footnote 183 Like all Charter freedoms, Article 16 FRC can be restricted if the limitation is provided for by law, is justified on grounds of general interest, is proportional and respects the essence of the freedom. The CJEU held in this regard: “[T]he freedom to conduct a business does not constitute an unfettered prerogative, but must be examined in the light of its function in society. The freedom to conduct a business may thus be subject to a broad range of interventions on the part of public authorities which may limit the exercise of economic activity in the public interest.” Footnote 184

Labelling requirements and advertising restrictions constrain the freedom to conduct a business. Footnote 185 According to the CJEU, this is because such requirements restrict the free use of the undertaking’s resources at their disposal, as the requirement may represent a significant cost and may have a considerable impact on the business. Footnote 186 However, they can be justified on important policy grounds, such as the protection of health and of consumers. Footnote 187 The CJEU repeatedly held that labelling and advertising requirements do not affect the essence of the right to conduct a business because they do not limit the production or sale of products. Footnote 188 The proportionality analysis conducted under Article 16 FRC is the same as that under Article 11 FRC. Footnote 189 In essence, the Court investigates whether the legislator has sought to strike a fair balance between the various affected fundamental rights. Footnote 190 In Deutsches Weintor, the CJEU found the prohibition of health claims on alcoholic beverages to be justified on grounds of health protection and proportional. The case concerned the promotion of wine as “easily digestible”. According to the Court, consumers are influenced by such claims, which therefore can lead to increased consumption. Footnote 191 The Court held that “[i]t is essential that all claims in relation to [alcoholic] beverages are entirely unambiguous, so that consumers are in a position to regulate their consumption while taking into account all the inherent dangers associated with such consumption, and in so doing to protect their health effectively”. Footnote 192 It notes that the advertising claim in question is silent as to the fact that, regardless of sound digestion, the dangers inherent in the consumption of alcoholic beverages are not in any way removed, or even limited.” Footnote 193 The CJEU concluded that the European legislators were justified in banning health claims on alcoholic beverages.

An illustrative example of the application of Article 16 FRC to advertising restrictions is Pillbox 38 (2016). In this case, the CJEU had to evaluate, inter alia, the validity of the near-comprehensive advertising ban on electronic cigarettes laid down by the Tobacco Products Directive. The CJEU established that the ban does not affect the essence of Article 16 FRC, as it does not prevent economic operators from manufacturing and selling electronic cigarettes. Footnote 194 The ban also does not exceed the limits of what is appropriate and necessary to achieve the legitimate objectives pursued by the Tobacco Products Directive, namely to harmonise national rules that hinder free movement and are liable to distort competition, while ensuring a high level of protection of public health. Footnote 195 The advertising ban therefore meets the conditions of Article 52(1) FRC and is thus consistent with Article 16 FRC.

Similar considerations will apply to a fossil fuel advertising ban. Given that it does not restrict sales, it does not affect the essence of the right to conduct a business. The proportionality of the measure in the light of its regulatory objectives has already been discussed earlier. A fossil fuel advertising ban, particularly if it follows the example of the tobacco advertising ban, is thus likely to be compatible with the freedom to conduct a business under Article 16 FRC.

4. A national fossil fuel advertising ban in the light of EU internal market law

EU internal market law guarantees the right to freely move goods across borders and to provide and receive services in a cross-border context. These rights are enshrined in Articles 34 and 56 TFEU. Article 34 TFEU is relevant for advertising restrictions on goods, such as fossil fuels or petrol-powered cars, whereas Article 56 TFEU is relevant for advertising restrictions on services, such as air travel. The provisions can be invoked directly by individuals and corporations in national courts against national legislation and administrative action that restrict these freedoms. Footnote 196 The analysis of restrictions under internal market law is essentially identical to that conducted under Article 16 FRC. Footnote 197

Article 34 TFEU prohibits quantitative restrictions on imports of goods, as well as measures having an equivalent effect. The prohibition extends to any national measure that is liable to directly or indirectly, actually or potentially restrict the free movement of goods, as the CJEU ruled in Dassonville (1974). Footnote 198 Exempt from this broad scope are measures that do not require alterations of the goods and merely affect the conditions of how they are sold, the so-called “selling arrangements” (Keck, 1993). Footnote 199 The exemption applies as long as the national measure affects domestic and non-domestic products alike, in both law and fact. National measures that do not benefit from the Keck exemption may nonetheless be justified on overriding grounds of public interest. Article 36 TFEU provides an illustrative list of justifications: “grounds of public morality, public policy or public security; the protection of health and life of humans, animals or plants; the protection of national treasures possessing artistic, historic or archaeological value; or the protection of industrial and commercial property”. Additional justifications recognised by the CJEU include environmental and consumer protection. Footnote 200

Article 56 TFEU prohibits restrictions on the freedom to provide and receive services. The CJEU interprets the scope of the ban expansively, covering all national measures that make the provision of services with a cross-border component less attractive than in a comparable domestic situation. Footnote 201 Restrictive measures can be justified on overriding grounds of public interest. These include, but are not limited to, the grounds listed in Article 52 TFEU, namely “public policy, public security or public health”.

Justifiable restrictions on economic freedoms must also meet the proportionality requirement, which has two aspects. Footnote 202 First, the national measure must be suitable to achieve the stated policy objective, which excludes measures that are wildly inconsistent or that use the public policy objective as a mere pretext to disfavour the cross-border provisions of goods or services. Second, the restrictive effect must not go beyond what is necessary to achieve the objective. In the absence of harmonised rules, Member States have the right to determine the level of protection they wish to afford to their citizens. Footnote 203 This also implies a considerable degree of discretion in choosing the regulatory means to achieve that objective. In doing so, however, they need to pay attention to potential adverse transnational effects of their choices and prevent them to the extent possible.

The CJEU dealt with advertising restrictions in a number of judgments. Footnote 204 The case Aragonesa de Publicidad Exterior (1991) concerned a Catalonian ban on the promotion of alcoholic drinks of more than twenty-three degrees (ca. 13%) alcohol content in mass media, on streets and highways, in cinemas and on public transport. Footnote 205 The Court found the measure not to be precluded by internal market law. Footnote 206 According to the CJEU, the ban was a suitable means to protect public health, arguing that “advertising acts as an encouragement to consumption and the existence of rules restricting the advertising of alcoholic beverages in order to combat alcoholism reflects public health concerns”. Footnote 207 Regarding the necessity of the measure, the Court pointed out that the freedom of trade is restricted only to a limited extent, and it held that a prohibition of promoting strong alcoholic drinks “does not appear to be manifestly unreasonable as part of a campaign against alcoholism”. Footnote 208 The case De Agostini (1997) concerned a Swedish ban on television advertising targeting children under twelve years of age. Footnote 209 While the ban applied without distinction to domestic and foreign service providers alike, the Court held that an advertising ban might affect imported goods more severely than domestic ones, as the latter may benefit from greater familiarity among consumers. Consequently, the Keck exemption did not apply. However, the advertising ban was held to be justifiable on overriding grounds in the public interest, such as the protection of vulnerable consumers, if implemented in a proportional manner. Footnote 210 The case Gourmet International Products dealt with a Swedish ban on advertising for alcoholic beverages containing more than 2.25% of alcohol by volume. The CJEU noted that this ban effectively prohibited producers and importers from advertising to consumers, with very few exceptions. Footnote 211 This makes the ban liable to impede market access for imported products more than for domestic products, with which consumers are more familiar. The Keck exemption was therefore inapplicable. However, the Court found that the measure could be justified on grounds of the protection of public health against the harmful effects of alcohol, unless it is apparent that the same objective could be achieved with measures that are less restrictive to cross-border trade. Footnote 212 In Bacardi France v TF1 (2004), which concerned restrictions on advertising for alcoholic beverages at sports events, the CJEU emphasised that Member States have a considerable margin of discretion in deciding on the level of protection that they wish to afford to public health and on the means by which that protection is to be achieved. Footnote 213

In the judgment Philip Morris Norway (2011), the European Free Trade Association (EFTA) Court had to deal with advertising restrictions on tobacco. Footnote 214 The EFTA Agreement protects economic rights that are equivalent to the internal market freedoms. The case concerned a Norwegian law that extended the advertising prohibition to the visible display of tobacco products, except in dedicated tobacco stores. The Court noted that a ban may have a restrictive effect on the marketing of tobacco products. Footnote 215 If it affects domestic and imported goods alike, the ban benefits from the Keck exemption. Footnote 216 If that is not the case, the ban may be justifiable as a measure protecting public health, if it meets the requirement of proportionality. Footnote 217 According to the Court, the measure “by its nature seems likely to limit, at least in the long run, the consumption of tobacco” and is therefore suitable to achieve the objective of protecting public health. Footnote 218 Unless there is a less restrictive means available to achieve the goal, the ban cannot be considered to violate the prohibition of quantitative restrictions on the import of goods and measures of equivalent effect. Footnote 219 The Court emphasised in this context that it is sufficient for the government to demonstrate that “it was reasonable to assume that the measure would be able to contribute to the protection of human health”, even in the presence of some scientific uncertainty. Footnote 220

To summarise, EU internal market law does not prohibit national advertising restrictions that serve an objective of public interest. A national fossil fuel advertising ban can therefore be in conformity with internal market law. The preceding overview shows that internal market law is very sensitive to national restrictions that undermine market access of goods and service providers from other Member States. Advertising restrictions can make it more difficult for new competitors to enter a national market and may therefore benefit domestic goods and service providers. A national advertising ban must be designed in a way to minimise this risk.

VII. Conclusion

The article analysed the legality of a fossil fuel advertising ban under European law. It arrived at the following findings. First, advertising for tobacco and for fossil fuels and other high-carbon products are comparable in important respects. In both cases, advertising plays a significant role in exacerbating the harm caused by the two commodities. Consequently, the regulation of tobacco advertising is a plausible model for the design of a fossil fuel advertising ban, and the case law on the regulation of tobacco advertising is of relevance in evaluating its legality. Second, a fossil fuel advertising ban pursues multiple regulatory objectives, namely the protection of health, the environment, consumers and the democratic process. Third, the experience of tobacco regulation shows that advertising bans must be as comprehensive as possible, as otherwise they are easy to circumvent. Fourth, both the EU and the Member States are competent to enact a fossil fuel advertising ban. At the EU level, Article 114 TFEU provides a plausible legal basis if it can be shown that a Europe-wide ban contributes to functioning of the internal market. This is the case when diverging national rules on fossil fuel advertising are emerging. Fifth, a fossil fuel advertising ban is liable to restrict the freedom of commercial speech, the freedom to conduct a business and internal market freedoms. However, these restrictions can be justified on the grounds of the objectives pursued by the ban, particularly because the Treaties require a high level of protection of health, the environment and consumers. Sixth, to justify its restrictive effects, a fossil fuel advertising ban must be proportional. It must strike a fair balance between the affected interests, be designed in a consistent manner and be based on the best available scientific evidence. If the ban is modelled after the example of the tobacco advertising ban, it can be expected to conform to the requirements of European law.

Competing interests

The author declares none.

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62 MB Reitsma et al, “Spatial, Temporal, and Demographic Patterns in Prevalence of Smoking Tobacco Use and Attributable Disease Burden in 204 Countries and Territories, 1990–2019: A Systematic Analysis from the Global Burden of Disease Study 2019” (2021) 397 The Lancet 2337; G Carreras et al, “Burden of Disease Attributable to Second-Hand Smoke Exposure: A Systematic Review” (2019) 129 Preventive Medicine 105833.

63 A 2022 WHO report highlights the significant environmental harm that tobacco causes throughout its lifecycle. See World Health Organization, “Tobacco: Poisoning Our Planet” (2022); M Zafeiridou, NS Hopkinson and N Voulvoulis, “Cigarette Smoking: An Assessment of Tobacco’s Global Environmental Footprint Across Its Entire Supply Chain” (2018) 52 Environmental Science & Technology 8087.

64 M Goodchild, N Nargis and ET d’Espaignet, “Global Economic Cost of Smoking-Attributable Diseases” (2018) 27 Tobacco Control 58.

65 Shukla et al, supra, note 6, 85; BA Jafino et al, Revised Estimates of the Impact of Climate Change on Extreme Poverty by 2030 (Washington, DC, World Bank 2020).

66 National Institute on Drug Abuse, “Tobacco, Nicotine, and E-Cigarettes – Research Report” (2022) pp 3–6 <https://nida.nih.gov/download/1344/tobacco-nicotine-e-cigarettes-research-report.pdf?v=4b566e8f4994f24caa650ee93b59ec41> (last accessed 24 January 2023).

67 ibid, 4.

68 ibid, 5–6.

69 R Roemer, Legislative Action to Combat the World Tobacco Epidemic (Geneva, World Health Organization 1993) pp 71–78.

70 A Brandt, The Cigarette Century (New York, Basic Books 2007) pp 69–101.

71 ibid, 159–207, 241–77.

72 E Shove, M Watson and N Spurling, “Conceptualizing Connections: Energy Demand, Infrastructures and Social Practices” (2015) 18 European Journal of Social Theory 274.

73 J Spencer, “The Energy Dependence Syndrome” (1990) 9 Drug and Alcohol Review 273.

74 H Allcott, M Gentzkow and L Song, “Digital Addiction” (2022) 112 American Economic Review 2424; P Berthon, L Pitt and C Campbell, “Addictive De-Vices: A Public Policy Analysis of Sources and Solutions to Digital Addiction” (2019) 38 Journal of Public Policy & Marketing 451.

75 S Lange, J Pohl and T Santarius, “Digitalization and Energy Consumption. Does ICT Reduce Energy Demand?” (2020) 176 Ecological Economics 106760.

76 GC Unruh, “Understanding Carbon Lock-In” (2000) 28 Energy Policy 817, 818–19; Seto et al, supra, note 36.

77 Unruh, supra, note 76, 828.

78 Shukla et al, supra, note 6, 557–58, 1378.

79 See already Spencer, supra, note 73.

80 Romanello et al, supra, note 32, 1620.

81 “WHO Urges Accelerated Action to Protect Human Health and Combat the Climate Crisis at a Time of Heightened Conflict and Fragility”, supra, note 32.

82 “Guterres: “‘Global Addiction to Fossil Fuels’ Must End and a ‘Renewables Revolution’ Jumpstarted” (UN, 18 September 2022) <https://news.un.org/en/story/2022/09/1126931> (last accessed 3 March 2023); see already S Suranovic, “Fossil Fuel Addiction and the Implications for Climate Change Policy” (2013) 23 Global Environmental Change 598.

83 Roemer, supra, note 69, 31.

84 S Vollstädt-Klein et al, “Severity of Dependence Modulates Smokers’ Neuronal Cue Reactivity and Cigarette Craving Elicited by Tobacco Advertisement” (2011) 16 Addiction Biology 166; C Schooler, MD Basil and DG Altman, “Alcohol and Cigarette Advertising on Billboards: Targeting With Social Cues” (1996) 8 Health Communication 109.

85 Roemer, supra, note 69, 25.

86 Brandt, supra, note 70, 159–207.

87 G Reed et al, “The Disinformation Playbook: How Industry Manipulates the Science-Policy Process – And How to Restore Scientific Integrity” (2021) 42 Journal of Public Health Policy 622.

88 Brandt, supra, note 70, 665–74; EM Eaton and NA Day, “Petro-Pedagogy: Fossil Fuel Interests and the Obstruction of Climate Justice in Public Education” (2020) 26 Environmental Education Research 457; see also “Shell grote speler in fossiel lesmateriaal” (Fossielvrij Onderwijs, 29 April 2019) <https://fossielvrijonderwijs.nl/2019/04/29/shell-in-het-basisonderwijs-middelbare-school/> (last accessed 26 April 2023).

89 For an overview see Suranovic, supra, note 82.

90 L Sanchez, I Gerasimchuck and J Beagley, “Burning Problems, Inspiring Solutions: Sharing Lessons on Action against Tobacco and Fossil Fuels” (International Institute for Sustainable Development, 2019) p 12 <https://ncdalliance.org/sites/default/files/resource_files/BurningProblemsInspiringSolutions_WEB_0.pdf> (last accessed 26 January 2023).

91 WHO Framework Convention on Tobacco Control (adopted 21 May 2003, entered into force 27 February 2005) 2302 UNTS 166 (FCTC) 2003.

92 Art 3 FCTC.

93 Art 4(4) FCTC.

94 FCTC, Preamble.

95 Roemer, supra, note 69, 20–21.

96 Guidelines for implementation of Article 13 of the WHO Framework Convention on Tobacco Control (Tobacco advertising, promotion and sponsorship), decision FCTC/COP3(12), 2008.

97 ibid, para 3.

98 ibid, para 3.

99 ibid, para 5.

100 ibid, para 22.

101 ibid, para 12.

102 ibid, paras 25–28.

103 ibid, para 25.

104 ibid, para 27.

105 Roemer, supra, note 69, 17.

106 ibid, 32.

107 ibid, 32–39.

108 Art 13 Council Directive 89/552/EEC of 3 October 1989 on the coordination of certain provisions laid down by Law, Regulation or Administrative Action in Member States concerning the pursuit of television broadcasting activities [1989] OJ L 298/23 (Television without Frontiers Directive).

109 Directive 98/43/EC of the European Parliament and of the Council of 6 July 1998 on the approximation of the laws, regulations and administrative provisions of the Member States relating to the advertising and sponsorship of tobacco products [1998] OJ 213/9 (Tobacco Advertising Directive I).

110 M Neuman, A Bitton and S Glantz, “Tobacco Industry Strategies for Influencing European Community Tobacco Advertising Legislation” (2002) 359 The Lancet 1323, 1326.

111 Case C-376/98, Federal Republic of Germany v European Parliament and Council of the European Union (Tobacco Advertising I) [2000] ECLI:EU:C:2000:544.

112 Directive 2003/33/EC of the European Parliament and of the Council of 26 May 2003 on the approximation of the laws, regulations and administrative provisions of the Member States relating to the advertising and sponsorship of tobacco products [2003] OJ L 152/16 (Tobacco Advertising Directive II).

113 Case C-380/03, Federal Republic of Germany v European Parliament and Council of the European Union (Tobacco Advertising II) [2006] ECLI:EU:C:2006:772.

114 Art 9(1)(d) AVMSD.

115 ibid, preamble, para 88.

116 Art 9(2) ibid.

117 Art 1 Tobacco Advertising Directive II.

118 Art 3(1) ibid.

119 Art 2(b) ibid.

120 Art 20(5) Directive 2014/40/EU of the European Parliament and of the Council of 3 April 2014 on the approximation of the laws, regulations and administrative provisions of the Member States concerning the manufacture, presentation and sale of tobacco and related products and repealing Directive 2001/37/EC [2014] OJ L 127/1 (Tobacco Products Directive).

121 WHO, “Indicator Report ‘C271 – Comprehensive Ban on All Tobacco Advertising, Promotion and Sponsorship” <https://untobaccocontrol.org/impldb/indicator-report/?wpdtvar=3.2.7.1> (last accessed 6 April 2023).

122 Arts 2–6 TFEU; Art 5(2) TEU.

123 Art 4(2) TFEU.

124 Art 2(2) TFEU.

125 Arts 6 and 168(5) TFEU.

126 The only exception is the AVMSD, which is based on Arts 62 and 53 TFEU, authorising legislation to harmonise national rules on the taking-up and pursuit of activities as self-employed persons.

127 Tobacco Advertising I, supra, note 111, paras 95 and 106; Case C-547/14, Philip Morris Brands SARL and Others v Secretary of State for Health [2016] ECLI:EU:C:2016:325, para 58.

128 Art 114(3) TFEU; for critical voices on the broad scope of Art 114 TFEU, see V Delhomme, “Between Market Integration and Public Health: The Paradoxical EU Competence to Regulate Tobacco Consumption” (College of Europe, Department of European Legal Studies, Research Papers in Law 1/2018); G Davies, “Democracy and Legitimacy in the Shadow of Purposive Competence” (2015) 21 European Law Journal 2; S Weatherill, “The Limits of Legislative Harmonization Ten Years after Tobacco Advertising: How the Court’s Case Law Has Become a Drafting Guide” (2011) 12 German Law Journal 827.

129 Weatherill, supra, note 128.

130 ibid, 832.

131 Tobacco Advertising I, supra, note 111, para 86; see also Philip Morris Brands SARL, supra, note 127, para 59; Case C-491/01, The Queen v Secretary of State for Health, ex parte British American Tobacco (Investments) Ltd and Imperial Tobacco Ltd [2002] ECLI:EU:C:2002:741, para 67.

132 Tobacco Advertising Directive II, preamble, para 4.

133 ibid, preamble, para 5.

134 ibid, preamble, para 6.

135 Tobacco Advertising II, supra, note 113, para 88.

136 Art 5(1) and (4) TEU.

137 Case C-358/14, Republic of Poland v European Parliament and Council of the European Union (Menthol Cigarettes) [2016] ECLI:EU:C:2016:323, para 78.

138 See supra, note 51; see also Case C-157/14, Société Neptune Distribution v Ministre de l’Économie et des Finances [2015] ECLI:EU:C:2015:823, para 73.

139 Case C-477/14, Pillbox 38 (UK) Limited, trading as Totally Wicked v Secretary of State for Health [2016] ECLI:EU:C:2016:324, para 55; Société Neptune Distribution, supra, note 138, para 82.

140 Pillbox 38, supra, note 139, para 116.

141 Case C-151/17, Swedish Match AB v Secretary of State for Health [2018] ECLI:EU:C:2018:938, para 37; Menthol Cigarettes, supra, note 137, paras 150–51; Société Neptune Distribution, supra, note 138, 76.

142 Pillbox 38, supra, note 139, 115.

143 Société Neptune Distribution, supra, note 138, paras 76–82; Case C-544/10, Deutsches Weintor eG v Land Rheinland-Pfalz [2012] ECLI:EU:C:2012:526, paras 42–59.

144 Pillbox 38, supra, note 139, para 113.

145 For national restrictions on alcohol advertising, see WHO, supra, note 61, 8–11; for national restrictions on gambling and betting, see Kerr et al, supra, note 61, 40–43.

146 markt intern Verlag GmbH and Klaus Beermann [1989] ECtHR 10572/83, para 26; Casado Coca v Spain [1994] ECtHR 15450/89, paras 35–36.

147 Sekmadienis Ltd v Lithuania [2018] ECtHR 69317/14, para 71.

148 Mouvement raëlien suisse v Switzerland [2012] ECtHR 16354/06, para 69.

149 Animal Defenders International v the United Kingdom [2013] ECtHR 48876/08, para 108.

150 ibid, para 108.

151 ibid, para 109.

152 ibid, para 109.

153 Sekmadienis Ltd. v. Lithuania (n 147), para 73; See MH Randall, “Commercial Speech under the European Convention on Human Rights: Subordinate or Equal?” (2006) 6 Human Rights Law Review 53.

154 markt intern Verlag GmbH and Klaus Beermann, supra, note 146.

155 ibid, para 31.

156 ibid, para 34.

157 ibid, para 33.

158 Casado Coca v Spain, supra, note 146.

159 ibid, para 46.

160 ibid, para 50.

161 ibid, para 51.

162 ibid, para 51.

163 ibid, para 55.

164 Sekmadienis Ltd. v. Lithuania, supra, note 147.

165 ibid, para 83.

166 Société de conception de presse et d’édition et Ponson v France [2009] ECtHR 26935/05; Hachette Filipacchi Presse Automobile et Dupuy c France [2009] ECtHR 13353/05; see K Dzehtsiarou and A Garde, “Freedom of Commercial Expression and Public Health Protection at the European Court of Human Rights” (2022) 50 Journal of Law, Medicine & Ethics 250.

167 Société de conception de presse et d’édition et Ponson v France, supra, note 166, para 56.

168 ibid, para 60.

169 ibid, para 59.

170 ibid, para 63.

171 ibid, para 58.

172 Art 51(1) FRC.

173 Case C-555/19, Fussl Modestraße Mayr GmbH v SevenOne Media GmbH and Others [2021] ECLI:EU:C:2021:89, para 80; Case C-201/15, Anonymi Geniki Etairia Tsimenton Iraklis (AGET Iraklis) v Ypourgos Ergasias, Koinonikis Asfalisis kai Koinonikis Allilengyis [2016] ECLI:EU:C:2016:972, para 64.

174 Art 52(3) FRC; Fussl Modestraße, supra, note 173, para 82; see also Case C-71/02, Herbert Karner Industrie-Auktionen GmbH v Troostwijk GmbH [2004] ECLI:EU:C:2004:181, paras 48–52.

175 Art 52(1) FRC.

176 Philip Morris Brands SARL, supra, note 127, para 151.

177 ibid, para 154; Fussl Modestraße, supra, note 173, para 92; Deutsches Weintor, supra, note 143, para 47.

178 Fussl Modestraße, supra, note 173, para 91; Philip Morris Brands SARL, supra, note 127, para 155.

179 Société Neptune Distribution, supra, note 138, para 74.

180 Art 13(1) Tobacco Products Directive.

181 Philip Morris Brands SARL, supra, note 127, para 159.

182 Case C-134/15, Lidl GmbH & Co KG v Freistaat Sachsen [2016] ECLI:EU:C:2016:498, para 28.

183 Case C-314/12, UPC Telekabel Wien GmbH v Constantin Film Verleih GmbH and Wega Filmproduktionsgesellschaft mbH [2014] ECLI:EU:C:2014:192, para 49.

184 Pillbox 38, supra, note 139, paras 157–58; see also Société Neptune Distribution, supra, note 138, para 66; Deutsches Weintor, supra, note 143, para 54.

185 Lidl, supra, note 182, para 29.

186 ibid, para 29.

187 ibid, para 32; Société Neptune Distribution, supra, note 138, para 72.

188 Société Neptune Distribution, supra, note 138, paras 70–71; Deutsches Weintor, supra, note 143, paras 57–58.

189 Société Neptune Distribution, supra, note 138, paras 67–85.

190 Deutsches Weintor, supra, note 143, para 59.

191 ibid, para 37.

192 ibid, para 50.

193 ibid, para 51.

194 Pillbox 38, supra, note 139, para 161.

195 ibid, paras 111–12.

196 The internal market requirements also apply to EU institutions; see Case C-210/03, The Queen, on the application of: Swedish Match AB and Swedish Match UK Ltd v Secretary of State for Health [2004] ECLI:EU:C:2004:802, para 59.

197 Joined Cases C-407/19 and C-471/19, Katoen Natie Bulk Terminals NV and General Services Antwerp NV v Belgische Staat and Middlegate Europe NV v Ministerraad [2021] ECLI:EU:C:2021:107, para 56.

198 Case 8/74, Procureur du Roi v Benoît and Gustave Dassonville [1974] ECLI:EU:C:1974:82, para 5.

199 Joined cases C-267/91 and C-268/91, Criminal proceedings against Bernard Keck and Daniel Mithouard [1993] ECLI:EU:C:1993:905, para 16.

200 Case 302/86, Commission v. Denmark (beer bottles) [1988] ECLI:EU:C:1988:421, para 9; Case C-120/78, Rewe-Zentral AG v. Bundesmonopolverwaltung für Branntwein (Cassis de Dijon) [1979] ECLI:EU:C:1979:42, para 8.

201 Case C-341/05, Laval un Partneri Ltd v Svenska Byggnadsarbetareförbundet, Svenska Byggnadsarbetareförbundets avdelning 1, Byggettan and Svenska Elektrikerförbundet [2007] ECLI:EU:C:2007:809, para 99.

202 F Weiss and C Kaupa, European Union Internal Market Law (Cambridge, Cambridge University Press 2014) pp 34–35.

203 Joined cases C-1/90 and C-176/90, Aragonesa de Publicidad Exterior SA and Publivía SAE v Departamento de Sanidad y Seguridad Social de la Generalitat de Cataluña [1991] ECLI:EU:C:1991:327, para 16; see also Case C-141/07, Commission of the European Communities v Federal Republic of Germany (pharmacies) [2008] ECLI:EU:C:2008:492, para 51.

204 See in particular Case C-339/15, Criminal proceedings against Luc Vanderborght [2017] ECLI:EU:C:2017:335; Kostas Konstantinides [2013] ECJ Case C-475/11, ECLI:EU:C:2013:542; Case C-500/06, Corporación Dermoestética SA v To Me Group Advertising Media [2008] ECLI:EU:C:2008:421; Case C-429/02, Bacardi France SAS, formerly Bacardi-Martini SAS v Télévision française 1 SA (TF1), Groupe Jean-Claude Darmon SA and Girosport SARL [2004] ECLI:EU:C:2004:432; Case C-405/98, Konsumentombudsmannen (KO) v Gourmet International Products AB (GIP) [2001] ECJ ECLI:EU:C:2001:135; Joined cases C-34/95, C-35/95 and C-36/95, Konsumentombudsmannen (KO) v De Agostini (Svenska) Förlag AB and TV-Shop i Sverige AB [1997] ECJ ECLI:EU:C:1997:344; Aragonesa de Publicidad Exterior, supra, note 203.

205 Aragonesa de Publicidad Exterior, supra, note 203.

206 ibid, para 26.

207 ibid, para 15.

208 ibid, para 17.

209 De Agostini, supra, note 204.

210 Gourmet International Products, supra, note 204, para 47.

211 ibid, para 20.

212 ibid, para 46.

213 Bacardi France, supra, note 204, para 40.

214 Philip Morris Norway AS and The Norwegian State [2011] EFTA Court Case E-16/10.

215 ibid, para 42.

216 ibid, paras 44–51.

217 ibid, paras 77–79.

218 ibid, para 84.

219 ibid, para 88.

220 ibid, para 83.