This two-part op-ed series explores how modern marketing and technology practices can evolve toward more ethical, intentional and human-centered systems. It invites marketers to rethink their role in shaping digital culture, offering frameworks rooted in dignity, equity and sustainability.
By Tina Morwani
Part 1: The Hidden Emissions of Your Ad Campaign
Digital marketing is powered by fossil fuels. It’s time we started counting the clicks that cost the planet.
At first glance, a display ad looks harmless. A few pixels, a flicker of colour, a passive impression. But behind that moment is an invisible chain reaction: real-time bidding auctions, ad servers, data transfers and machine learning models running across energy-intensive infrastructure.
We often describe digital as sustainable. No trees fell. No shipping containers. Just clean, efficient media. But that assumption misses a crucial truth: the internet is physical. It lives in server farms, undersea cables, data centers – all powered, more often than not, by fossil fuels.
Digital advertising, in particular, is one of the least visible contributors to carbon emissions. A single programmatic campaign can generate up to 5.4 tons of CO2, roughly the same as flying a passenger across the Atlantic several times. Multiply that by the millions of campaigns running simultaneously, and the environmental cost becomes impossible to ignore.
While brands publish sustainability reports and set net-zero goals, media buying escapes scrutiny. Carbon is measured in supply chains, not CPMs. This is the blind spot of the digital age.
But what if we treated emissions the way we treat impressions? What if campaigns were optimized not just for efficiency, but for impact, on people and the planet?
To close the gap between message and model, we need a new lens. One that redefines sustainability as more than a positioning strategy. One that challenges marketing to move from extraction to renewal. The R.E.A.L. framework offers a practical, principled approach.
Regenerative: Brands must go beyond net-zero and support systems that actively restore the planet. Offset, yes, but also redesign.
- Integrate carbon tracking into media planning and reporting tools.
- Treat emissions with the same rigour as impressions or CPMs.
- Design media strategies that minimize waste, not just maximize reach.
Ethical: Sustainability messaging must be grounded in substance, not spin. In an era of rising climate scrutiny, credibility is currency.
- Favour low-emission ad formats (e.g., static banners over autoplay video).
- Anchor environmental claims in verifiable data, communicated with humility and clarity.
- Avoid greenwashing. It’s better to share honest progress than polished perfection.
Accountable: Sustainability needs to be a KPI, not a campaign.
- Include emissions data in post-campaign analysis and quarterly reporting.
- Collaborate with vendors and agencies to assess emissions across the programmatic supply chain.
- Make environmental performance a criterion in RFPs, contracts and partner evaluations.
Localized: Sustainability isn’t universal, it’s contextual. Effective action begins with understanding place.
- Design initiatives that reflect regional realities, from infrastructure and energy grids to cultural values.
- Prioritize publishers and platforms that use renewable energy in-market.
- Equip in-market teams to experiment with and scale sustainable media practices that work where they are.
These aren’t silver bullets, but they’re a start. Sustainability isn’t just about products or packaging, it’s about the systems we build and the signals we send.
The good news? Some companies are already leading. Tools like Scope3 are making media emissions measurable. Brands like Lush and Ecosia are integrating climate action into their communications DNA.
In a landscape where performance is everything, pausing for sustainability may feel like a risk. But it may also be the most forward-looking strategy we have. Digital isn’t weightless. And every click leaves a trace.
The legacy of a brand isn’t just what it says. It’s what it sustains. And sometimes, the most powerful impression is the one you chose not to make.