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Va Va Vélo! Car adverts in France will have to promote cycling and walking under new law

Macron Government wants to encourage people to ditch their cars for everyday journeys

“Va Va Vélo!” as former Arsenal and France star striker Thierry Henry may have to say in any future adverts for Renault – from 1 March, car adverts in France will be required to promote cycling and walking and other sustainable forms of travel.

Under the new government regulations aimed at reducing pollution, including vehicle emissions, people will also be encouraged to car-share or to take public transport.

The new rules were signed into law by a decree of the Ministry for Ecological Transition on Wednesday 29 December, reports ladepeche.fr.

They will apply to advertising across all major media – print, TV, radio, billboards and online – with ads carrying one of three messages.

Those are “For short journeys, prioritise walking or cycling,” “Think about car-sharing” and “On a daily basis, take public transport.”

The messages are similar to those already found in advertising for some foods and drinks, such as “Avoid eating too much fat, sugar or salt.”

The adverts are aimed at encouraging consumers to pollute less by leaving their car at home and travelling by greener options, particularly for everyday journeys, with France’s transport sector accounting for 31 per cent of greenhouse gas emissions in France, half of that from private cars.

Besides the three slogans mentioned above, car manufacturers will also have to add a hashtag #SeDéplacerMoinsPolluer – roughly, #GetAroundPollutingLess – to all publicity.

In the event of a breach, the advertiser will first be put on notice, then subject to a fine of €50,000 for each transmission.

President Macron’s government also plans to ban all adverts for the most polluting cars – those emitting more than 123 grams of C02 per kilometre – by 2028.

Other environmentally friendly initiatives being taken to try and reduce waste and greenhouse gases include plastic packaging around most fruit and vegetables being banned from tomorrow – instead they will have to be sold in sustainable packaging such as cardboard.

Fast food outlets will not be allowed to provide plastic toys to children under offers such as McDonald’s Happy Meals under the new measures, and magazines and newspapers will no longer be permitted to be wrapped in plastic when posted to consumers.

Simon joined road.cc as news editor in 2009 and is now the site’s community editor, acting as a link between the team producing the content and our readers. A law and languages graduate, published translator and former retail analyst, he has reported on issues as diverse as cycling-related court cases, anti-doping investigations, the latest developments in the bike industry and the sport’s biggest races. Now back in London full-time after 15 years living in Oxford and Cambridge, he loves cycling along the Thames but misses having his former riding buddy, Elodie the miniature schnauzer, in the basket in front of him.

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39 comments

Avatar
Boopop | 2 years ago
8 likes

This is great news, I wish we had something like this. I was watching Die Hard with my family a few days ago and the "Sponsored by __ SUVs" adverts were insufferable. Inspires "Hollywood confidence" I think they were saying. Motor comopanies shouldn't be encouraging people to buy vehicles that demonstrably make our streets more dangerous for vulnerable road users just because they're "cool". Pretty sure smoking used to be smoking used to be advertised in the same way, which also has negative externalities, just like an unecessary abundance of SUVs.

Avatar
Sriracha | 2 years ago
17 likes

I'd like to see car adverts banned from showing the product driven down wide empty boulevards or sinuous alpine passes. They should be obliged to show that each car sold is one more addition to the congested, polluted street scene, one more nail in the coffin.

Avatar
ktache replied to Sriracha | 2 years ago
10 likes

"A great place to be when stuck in traffic on the M25..."

Avatar
IanGlasgow replied to Sriracha | 2 years ago
2 likes

I used to commute by car (after years of getting buses, then walking, I had to drive for about 2 years), thankfully I can now cycle. But when I commuted I seriously thought about trading my car (which up until then I'd been very happy with) for one that was better in stop start traffic - comfier seats, a better stereo, more convenient cupholders and an automatic gearbox all become much more important that trivia like how fast it is or whether it's fun to drive.

Avatar
Captain Badger replied to Sriracha | 2 years ago
1 like
Sriracha wrote:

I'd like to see car adverts banned from showing the product driven down wide empty boulevards or sinuous alpine passes. They should be obliged to show that each car sold is one more addition to the congested, polluted street scene, one more nail in the coffin.

I don't know if you've noticed that some actually do. The roads are filled with traffic, accept for the lane that contains the super car that ford/vauxhall/Merc didah didah are flogging. How foolish to buy a different make and be stuck in traffic, when you could by our car and get your own special lane.....

Avatar
belugabob replied to Captain Badger | 2 years ago
3 likes
Captain Badger wrote:

when you could by our car and get your own special lane.....

If you want your own special lane, just keep to the left, on the motorway - never fails

Avatar
Hirsute replied to belugabob | 2 years ago
0 likes

I guess you don't use the M25, M42.

Avatar
IanMSpencer replied to Hirsute | 2 years ago
0 likes

Heading to J5 of the M42, the HA quite often provide me with my own private lane when it gets busy.

Avatar
Captain Badger replied to belugabob | 2 years ago
0 likes
belugabob wrote:
Captain Badger wrote:

when you could by our car and get your own special lane.....

If you want your own special lane, just keep to the left, on the motorway - never fails

I find veering erratically across all lanes pretty much achieves the same aim....

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