Amsterdam bans public adverts for meat and fossil fuels
Amsterdam has become the world's first capital city to ban public s for both meat and fossil fuel products.
At one of the city's busiest tram stops, adjacent to a grassy roundabout bursting with vibrant yellow daffodils and orange tulips, the poster advertising landscape has changed. They now promote the Rijksmuseum, the national museum of the Netherlands, and a piano concert.
Until last week it was chicken nuggets, SUVs and low-budget holidays.
"The climate crisis is very urgent," says Anneke Veenhoff from the GreenLeft Party.
"Most people don't understand why the municipality should make money out of renting our public space with something that we are actively having policies against. "
She instigated the new restrictions, and rejects accusations of them being nanny state.
"In a way, we're giving people more freedom because they can make their own choice, right?"
1% of ad spend, compared with roughly 4% for fossil related products.
But politically the ban sends a message.
Grouping meat with flights, cruises and petrol and diesel cars reframes it from a purely private dietary choice to a climate issue.
For activists like lawyer Hannah Prins and her environmental organisation Advocates for the Future, which worked closely with campaign group Fossil-Free Advertising, the ban on meat advertising is a deliberate attempt to create a "tobacco moment" for high carbon food. "Because if I look now back at like old pictures, you have Johan Cruyff," says Prins.
"He would be in s for tobacco. That used to be normal. He died of lung cancer.
"That you were allowed to smoke on the train, on restaurants.
For me, that's like, whoa, why did people do that? You know, that feels so weird. "So it really is like what we see in our public space is what we find normal in our society. And I don't think it's normal to see murdered animals on billboards. So I think it's very good that that's going to change. "
The Dutch capital is not starting from scratch.
It came into force in 2024, together with a prohibition on fossil fuel adverts.
Globally, dozens of cities have, or are moving to, ban fossil-fuel advertising.
Such as Edinburgh, Sheffield, Stockholm and Florence. France even has a nationwide ban.
Stand at a tram stop in Amsterdam and you might no longer see a juicy burger or a 19 euro ($18.
90) flight to Berlin on the shelter. Yet the same eye-catching offers can still pop up in your social media algorithm.
And, let's face it, many of us would be looking down at our screens until the tram trundles along.
If municipal bans leave digital platforms untouched, how much real world impact can they have on our habits or are they purely symbolic virtue-signalling?
She describes Amsterdam's move as "a fantastic natural experiment to see".
"Because like everything we love, festivals, nice cheese, a flower shop around the corner. All the stuff that we love, we don't hear from through ads," she says.
"It's usually through people that we know, or we walk past the building.
So I think local businesses will be able to thrive because of this.
"I think and I hope that big polluting companies will be extra scared.
And maybe will rethink the kind of products they are selling. I think you can really see that change is possible
Logic Quality Breakdown:
- Updated_At:
- Truth_Blocks:
- Analysis_Method: