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Sustainability

The EFAD Sustainability Working Group was initiated in February 2020 with the objective to exchange best practices and information on sustainable initiatives launched by national film funds and other partners from the public and private sectors.

Tim

It is chaired by Tim Wagendorp, sustainability coordinator at the Flanders Audiovisual Fund (VAF).

Its objectives are:

  • Driving the shift towards reaching the 17 Sustainable Development Goals in the screen industries of each of the EFAD members;
  • Exchanging about best practices on sustainability, collecting and updating them regularly, in close cooperation European organisations (Cine-Regio, EFARN);
  • Collaborating on shared toolkits and frameworks to increase sustainable practice and offer useful resources to members and broader industry;
  • Focusing on interventions to increase sustainability throughout the life cycle/value chain of film, from script & development through to exhibition, online distribution and audience engagement, and linking to education and research;
  • Preparing common recommendations to the EU institutions and other relevant organisations.

 

EFAD members initiatives

 

Country/organis°

Summary

Useful links

Austria
  • Film Funding Act Austria and Funding Policy Goals / 5% Green Bonus and mandatory funding regulations for Green Filming in Austria for national productions and co-productions.
  • The Austrian Film Institute has implemented a Catalogue of criteria for ecological minimum Standards ÖFI/ÖFI+ with MUST and TARGET criteria in the interest of national and transnational harmonization and cooperation and also a Catalogue of criteria for Austrian Exploitation Funding for cinema releases ÖFI+. Additional Costs for Green Filming and the Green Film Consultants are eligible.
  • Adoption of an Austrian Eco Label - certification
  • Austrian Film Institute has a Green Filming Department since 2023.
  • The Austrian Film Institute and the Evergreen Prisma Competence Center for Green Filming (Digital Platform, Green Filming Academy & Joint Network) are the key stakeholders for the Green Filming strategy in Austria and have implemented the “Synergy Model of Green Filming Austria”, as well as the trainings of Green Film Consultants.
  • The Austrian Film Institute is hosting the Working Group Green Filming Austria, which includes 12 stakeholders from governmental, public and national institutions: ministries, Austrian national and regional film funds, broadcasters, the Austrian Eco Label, industry representatives and representatives from the Association of Green Film Consultants Austria (VGFCA). The AIM of the working group is the coordination and harmonization on a federal level in order to implement regulations on matters of sustainability for the Austrian media productions.
  • The working group “Green Co/Pro Europe” was established by Evergreen Prisma in April 2022 to establish hands-on solutions and is supervising transnational film productions. It`s currently focused on counties with already established green measures (based on funding regulations and regulations anchored in federal film laws).
  • The members are working on a harmonization of funding regulations and reporting for sustainable film productions, a mutual recognition and the harmonization of similar instruments such as Green Film Consultants, CO2-calculators and catalogues of criteria.

Green Filming - Austrian Film Institute

LAFC - Green Guide - PRISMA

LAFC - Green Co-Production Europe

Film Productions - Austrian Ecolabel

Belgium (Dutch speaking) - VAF VAF is one of the frontrunners in the field of sustainable production: sustainable actions are a formal requirement within our support for creation. The customized coaching has measurable effects. Clever choices in the field of transport, energy, catering, waste and material and pre- and postproduction can also result in financial benefits.
In 2018 VAF sustainability approach was widened, using the Sustainable Development Goals (SDG’s) of the United Nations as a moral compass, aiming to translate them into specific and inspiring actions for the broad media sector. They guide and inspire throughout the entire media chain: from school, script, production to screening.
VAF strengthens its sustainable knowledge, tools and expertise and strives towards a more uniform approach on the EU level. By exchanging knowledge they aim to implement sustainable measures throughout the entire audiovisual chain, working with cinemas and festivals, writers, producers, academic researchers, etc.
here
Denmark The big national TV broadcaster TV2 has chosen to certify some of the biggest studio productions it is doing. As of now only the show “Vild med dans” (Dancing with the stars) has been fully certified, the first live production in Europe to do so, but the other productions are using the GREEN FILM principles and three other big productions are in the process of achieving the certification. It is taking some time to get the certification implemented in a Danish context but this news shows we are beginning to be on track. here
Finland From early 2022, five production companies have tested the UK-developed Albert toolkit in Finland to reduce the emissions of their selected productions. The system is free at the point of use for productions and will now be available for all Finland professionals. The use of Albert is part of the Foundation’s sustainability strategy, aiming to develop the film and TV industry's social, cultural, economic, and ecological sustainability. here
France

The CNC launched the “Plan Action !” on June 2021, in order to set up a public policy for an energy and ecological transition in the cinema, audiovisual and moving image sectors. This plan aims at encouraging, defining, as well as imposing new obligations on the professionals of these sectors, within a span of 3 years (2022-2024). More specifically, in 2022, the CNC established an Observatory for ecological transition, which studies the green practices and energy impact of the sectors concerned (the first study on the energy impact of cinemas was published in June 2022). Since October 2022, a training programme on ecological challenges and responsible production is offered to university students. From March 31, 2023, producers of cinematographic works (feature films and shorts) and audiovisual works (series and one-offs) in the fiction and documentary genres have to provide a carbon footprint for their works when applying for support. The aim is to accompany professionals towards a more responsible transformation of the film and audiovisual sectors, and to make them aware of the environmental impact of their activities, to help them reduce it and to make the eco-responsibility of French productions an issue of international attractiveness.

here & here
Germany
  • German federal and regional film funds as well as numerous stakeholders of the German film industry have already been or are in the process of implementing the new “Ecological Standards for German Cinema, TV, and Online/VoD Productions”. The standards contain various scientifically approved criteria in order to reduce the climate and environmental impacts of audiovisual productions. On the basis of the ecological standards, producers are enabled to assign the label “green motion” to their content.
  • The legally binding standards have already been in effect in the German Federal Film Fund (DFFF) and German Motion Picture Fund (GMPF) as well as the Federal Film Act since March 2023.
  • All Federal funds accept expenses for Green Consultants as eligible costs.
  • Publication of a green cinema handbook (in German).
  • Implementation of a new funding scheme for movie theaters including the support of green measures.

Ecological Standards

Green cinema handbook

Hungary The Hungarian Film Institute produced a short online publication with green recommendations for those who want to be more environmentally conscious in their film production. This was the first step towards a more sustainable Hungarian film industry. here
Ireland

Screen Ireland has published a new Sustainability Plan outlining the agency’s ambitions to help work towards lowering the carbon footprint of Ireland’s screen industry. The new Plan sets out a series of actions and measures that Screen Ireland will take working in partnership with industry stakeholders over the next five years. Key sustainability commitments presented in the plan are: funding an in-depth assessment of the environmental impact of Ireland’s screen industry; Decarbonising Screen Ireland’s operations to become net-zero carbon by 2025; Mandatory use of a Carbon Calculator as a minimum requirement on all Screen Ireland funded productions; Developing a pilot programme to review energy consumption on productions; Providing a financial incentive pilot programme valued at up to 25K€ per production. Screen Ireland has launched a programme of consultation, support and practical guidance to enhance and accelerate the implementation of sustainability measures across the Irish screen industry. The project is called Future Ready Film, managed by Climate Innovation, with the support of Screen Ireland. It is designed to engage with key stakeholders across the live action film and television industry to understand the current barriers and opportunities related to sustainable production

here

Future Ready Film

UK The BFI has launched its ten-year strategy, Screen Culture 2033. This includes a National Lottery Strategy for the funding schemes it runs. Underpinning this strategy are three principles, one of which is Environmental Sustainability, including the following pledge: We will take the ecological impact of activity into all our funding decisions, and work with partners to improve it over the next 10 years. We will seek to support approaches that result in overall benefit to the environment, rather than merely seeking to reduce harm. […] Over the next 10 years, we will use our funding plans to scale requirements around environmental sustainability. We will also work with partners to develop effective support for awardees to engage with this strategic principle. The BFI’s funded feature films are required to complete BAFTA albert certification, which includes achieving carbon neutrality. All fiction short films are required to complete carbon foot printing via BAFTA albert. For documentaries, the BFI collaborated with Doc Society on their Green Filming Protocol. Research reports published to map current practice (Green Matters) and propose a sustainable studio production model (Screen New Deal). A Screen New Deal transformation pilot has been launched in Wales, focused on data collection to identify film and HETV-related services which already exist in the area, highlight service gaps and create a location-based transformation plan to decarbonize TV and film production. The BFI continues to programme work in its cinemas and platforms about the climate and ecological crisis, including Green Light: An Immersive Focus on Climate Change in 2021.

Screen Culture 2033

BAFTA albert certification

Green Filming Protocol

Screen New Deal transformation pilot

 

Carbon calculators

Name & Description Description
European common carbon emissions calculator The project has been entrusted to a consortium, with the leader Seriotec, a German company specialised in cloud-based applications such as the production hub Yamdu, alongside KlimAktiv, expert on systems for calculating the carbon footprint, and green film expert Philip Gassmann.  The project will run from January 2024 until December 2027 (48 months) and has an estimated budget of €650.000 from the MEDIA strand of Creative Europe programme
Eureca Eureca is a pilot project emerging from the European project Green Screen, financed by the European Regional Development Fund. Online instrument that will measure the carbon footprint of AV productions including resources to raise producers’ awareness of the impact of their activities on the environment and assist them with planning including top-end scientific conversion factors for CO2 which will facilitate sustainable filming across Europe and provide a monitoring and reporting tool which will enable the film funds to consolidate results at a regional level.
Albert  
Carbon clap Carbon'Clap is the carbon calculator for the film and TV industry developed by Ecoprod. 
Green Shot  
KlimAktiv-Greenshooting-CO₂-Calculator  
Secoya  

European Projects & Initiatives

Name & Description Description
Green Screen (Interreg funded project) Green Screen’s mission is to inspire and educate the nomadic world of filming by creating sustainable working practices. By reducing the environmental impact of filming essentials such as transport, construction, lighting and catering we aspire to lead European film & TV production into a greener way of life.

Green Film

Green Film is a tool designed to promote environmental sustainability for audiovisual productions and to guide producers in working in an environmentally sustainable manner, a label that certifies environmental sustainability for audiovisual productions, and a network of partners working together to implement strategies and tools for sustainable film production and to coordinate joint sustainability-related training activities.
Developed by Trentino Film Commission, a regional Film Fund in Northern Italy, and APPA (Agency for Environmental Protection) in 2017. Since then it has been improved and it is currently shared with many other film funds across Italy and Europe (Belgium, Spain, Norway, Denmark, Iceland).

EUFCN

Green Filming page with green protocols and best practices developed and adopted by film commissions

Facebook group Agora for sustainable Filming

A Facebook group representing a virtual meeting place for people working on the intersection between sustainability and audiovisual industry.

Green Film shooting blog

A platform for sustainability in the media industry presenting approaches to sustainable operating methods – in Europe as well as all over the world. It is also a forum for ambitious and creative professionals in the media to share their experiences, information, ideas, and new approaches.

Green Guide

Guide created by the Lower Austrian Film Commission for the sector.

Eurimages Sustainability Strategy

Eurimages Board of Management established a Sustainability Study Group in March 2021 to develop a strategy and action plan to help the Fund meet these challenges while continuing to support quality projects of international reach.

Deliverables:

  • a Sustainability Strategy
  • List of Useful tools for green film production
  • study on the carbon impact of the fund

Green Toolkit Film and TV

A free access platform that gathers practical guidance and shares sustainability practices and tools implemented across Europe for Film and Audiovisual production. This toolkit is the result of a project led by creative industry’s representative partners of the European audiovisual social dialogue in order to strengthen sustainable production capabilities and provide a unique source of information on what practices, tools, initiatives, incentives are already driving the sustainable transition of the industry. Deliverables:

  • A European booklet with best practices to make production more sustainable,
  • A database, focused on five main categories: carbon calculators, certifications, trainings, platforms, guides.

Screens of Tomorrow

Screens of tomorrow is a movement initiated by a hundred French audiovisual and film professionals who want to tell stories highlighting a more inclusive and sustainable society. Among them: Mediawan, Banijay, Canal +, Pathé, Haut et Court, France Tv, Nord Ouest, Arte, TF1, Newen, Ubisoft, Echo studio, Secoya... Together, they have co-constructed a new tool: the Screens of tomorrow guide. Created by and for the TV and film professionals, this guide serves as a means to reconsider writing and story line development routines to create new reference points for viewers. It includes a questionnaire to reassess writing automatisms without hindering their creativity, as well as a resource centre giving access to studies and expert advice on social and environmental issues.

Eco Movie Manifesto

The Eco Movie Manifesto aims to bake sustainability into the DNA of audiovisual stories from the moment synapses connect to form them. It goes upstream: from the dawn of script development, screen directors will champion diverse stories that can be told with minimal environmental impact. FERA will promote the “Vows of Sustainability”, restrictions for directors designed to positively simulate creativity and cultural diversity in addition to reducing carbon emissions of audiovisual production, and the ethos that informs them to the its 20,000 strong European screen directors community.

NEST - Northern Europe Sustainability Team-up

NEST, Northern Europe Sustainability Team-up, is a network created to spread and disseminate information about development and trends on sustainable production in Northern Europe.  The network includes members from Sweden, Norway, Finland, Denmark, Northern Germany, Poland, Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania. As a part of the making knowledge available the NEST has created a database of information on sustainable initiatives. The database is publicly available on demand. NEST also organizes seminars, workshops and meetings to promote and inspire the members and the regions. The network invites key players such as producers, green consultants and more to inspire and educate our members. The goal is to promote sustainable coproduction in the region.

REGIOSTARS Awards

Europe’s label of excellence for EU-funded projects that demonstrate the impact and inclusiveness of regional development since 2008. Green Screen, the Interreg funded project (see higher), has been selected for the 2023 awards.

ECOPROD

 

Created in 2009 as a collective, Ecoprod's mission is to unite and support the audiovisual sector in the broadest sense (cinema, advertising, TV, digital, corporate, etc.) in assessing and reducing its environmental impact. 

Guide to Filming in Natural Environments by Ecoprod (in French, July 2023)

 

Reports and Studies

Name & Date Useful Links
Albert 2022 Annual Review (October 2023)

here

“Greening the Creative Europe programme" study, commissioned by the European Commission (May 2023)

here

Fuel Project Supplier Guidance Report (October 2022)

here

Study commissioned by the European Commission and prepared by Philipp Gassmann on: "Greening the European Audiovisual Industry" (June 2021)

here

Study on the Carbon impact of video streaming, Carbon Trust (June 2021)

here

CineRegio Green Reports 2020

here

 

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