| World's first plastic bag billboard | |
PRESS RELEASE: "Only one bank can truly call itself the green bank" Those are the words emblazoned on the world's first recycled plastic bag billboard erected this week by Nedbank at OR Tambo International Airport in Johannesburg.
This is the third in the Nedbank series of billboards for good. The first being the solar panel billboard that powers up a kitchen in Alexander and won the top international honour at the 2006 Cannes Advertising Award. Then came the second solar billboard with a wind turbine. This was placed at the Cape Mission School in Cape Town. This supplies power to its kitchen, security lights and geysers, saving hundreds of Rands in electricity each month. According to Net#work's Executive Creative Director, Rob Mclennan, the agency has become fully focused on making a social difference while building its clients' brands. "In this case, we could really see the potential of the humble plastic shopping bag to make landmarks of positive change. This billboard has created jobs, married advertising with social conscience, showcased our local artistry and has removed some of the countries non bio-degradable rubbish." He says, "If this billboard can help to create more awareness of the country's plastic problem and the positive impact that recycling can have - then Nedbank will have further entrenched its reputation as the nation's truly 'green' bank." Greg Garden, Nedbank's Divisional Executive Group Marketing said the 'plastic' billboard is a unique way to reuse discarded plastic and it is another example of Nedbank's commitment to doing things differently. "It is an extension of Nedbank Group’s already well entrenched culture of conservation and environmental awareness. A culture that recently saw us become the first SA bank to publically commit to energy reduction targets, throughout our business via our Climate Change Position Statement," he says. Bernadette Briglin, head of advertising at Nedbank agrees. "This billboard is an innovative way to send out a marketing message in a way that not only creates employment opportunities, but also goes some way to solving our country's litter problems." Briglin points out, "plastic still represents an immense environmental problem because it can take anything between 400 and 1000 years to degrade."
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Nedbank's commitment to the environment would be more believable if I, as a client, did not receive junk mail trying to offer me loans I cannot afford approximately 6 times a year. A lot of money goes into these letters (no surprise that Nedbank has hiked its banking fees again in March - the last hike was less than a year ago), full colour, often printed on glossy materials, spot varnish etc. making them un-recycling-friendly. Multiply those 6 pieces of communication by the number of Nedbank clients, and that's a nice contribution to our country's landfills.
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