More than 10,000 minutes of soccer will be broadcast internationally during the World Cup this summer — and accompanying every World Cup moment is an elite tier of brands that paid tens of millions of dollars to appear in nearly every shot. One of those brands is Saudi Aramco – the world's biggest oil company
, majority-owned by Saudi Arabia.
“They (Aramco) want to pump up oil and sell oil for as long as they can, but they have a bad reputation because they're a fossil fuel company,” said Frank Huisingh, founder of Fossil Free Football, which has led a global campaign to oppose Aramco’s partnership with the World Cup. “And when you have a bad reputation, what's better to associate yourself with than the most popular event in the world?”
Despite its oil dominance, Saudi Aramco has billed itself as the “Global Energy Partner” of this World Cup, not the “Global Oil Partner.” That’s no accident.
“They're clearly trying to position themselves as part of the energy transition, as sort of more than just an oil company,” said Kristian Coates Ulrichsen, fellow for the Middle East at Rice University’s Baker Institute. He said what Aramco and other brands are doing is often described as sportswashing.
“They try to change the way that people talk, so you're not focusing on negative stuff, you're focusing on sport, on positive things,” Coates Ulrichsen said. “Sport has an appeal like no other.”
But World Cup fans don’t buy crude oil like they might beer or soda. So why does Saudi Aramco pay so much to sponsor the world’s biggest sporting event? Experts say the partnership isn’t about consumers — it’s about shaping the reputation of Saudi oil and Saudi Arabia. |