How Publicis Mojo Auckland created a deep sea oil drilling awareness campaign for Greenpeace

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MOJO 1.jpgCase Study: On October 5, New Zealand suffered its worst ever maritime environmental disaster when the MV Rena cargo ship ran aground and spilled 350 tonnes of oil into the Bay of Plenty, killing 20,000 birds.

 

The New Zealand government has opened its waters to foreign oil companies for deep sea oil prospecting. They promised that it would be safe and that they could control any environmental impact from an oil spill. But if they couldn’t control a small spill on the surface of the water, how could they ever hope to stop a massive spill 3kms below it?

To emphasise the risks of deep-sea oil, Greenpeace asked Mojo Auckland to use the smaller scale Rena oil spill as an example.

 

MOJO 3.jpgmojo gllery shot.jpgThe team  created hundreds of posters and 10 canvas artworks using the oil covered bodies of birds killed during the disaster as a memorial and a warning against a much greater catastrophe.

 

Each print was an original, made with actual birds and oil from Rena.

They then put these real oil prints up as street posters and opened a pop up gallery for an “oil on canvas” exhibition in the CBD.

The price of entry was simply to sign the petition.

 

They also created a TVC using the images of the prints and sent out individual DM packs with sealed oil prints to media and celebrities.

 

Creatives: Mike Barnwell, Guy Denniston, Lachlan McPherson

Production Company: Flying Fish

Director: James Solomon

Producer: Angela da Silva

Agency production: Conan Gorbey

Editor: Lisa Greenfield

Post production: Andrew Timms, Mat Ellin

Agency Producer: Liz Garneau

Music rights: Tim Moon of Media Music Ltd