Asiya Bakht
Mar 18, 2010

Asatsu-DK wins NEA's Keep Singapore Clean media strategy business

SINGAPORE - Singapore's National Environment Agency (NEA), a statutory board under the Ministry of Environment and Water Resources, has appointed Asatsu-DK to handle the media strategy for its 'Keep Singapore Clean' campaign after a tender process.

National Environment Agency Keep Singapore Clean campaign
National Environment Agency Keep Singapore Clean campaign
The government body launched a tender process in the last week of January.

As per the tender document Asatsu-DK will now work closely with NEA's corporate communications department to recommend, develop and implement a media plan across various platforms for the anti-littering campaign.

The campaign targets foreign workers in Singapore with the message that litter pollutes the environment and each one of us should be responsible for our own litter in making the effort to bin it properly. The advertising campaign also aims to increase awareness of Singapore's laws against littering and spitting in public places and the heavy fines imposed to enforce them.

Related Articles

Just Published

3 hours ago

Publicis dominates latest global new-business media ...

Publicis Collective has leapt into the lead for May, following its win of Coca-Cola's business in North America, while 13 new agencies join the top 20.

3 hours ago

WPP Media: How did one of the world’s biggest comms ...

Adland has been buzzing over the leaked news of GroupM’s rebrand. Is this WPP's bold reinvention or a sign of deeper troubles? TrinityP3's Darren Woolley looks at the communication missteps and what this shake-up means for advertisers, employees, and the future of media buying.

5 hours ago

LePub Singapore appoints Penny Sadlier as MD, makes ...

EXCLUSIVE: Sadlier's role expands within Publicis, and her leadership is bolstered with five key hires, including creative heavyweights from Ogilvy and MullenLowe.

5 hours ago

Max will revert to HBO Max after two years

Warner Bros Discovery announced it will revert its streaming service’s name from Max back to HBO Max following confusion and criticism.