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The Trust Project

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An illustration of a farmer in the field with a windmill and vegetable stand.
(Provided by Gigafact.)

No.

While Denver recently spent $3 million on a climate ad campaign, eating less meat was only one of many recommended actions, and was later removed from the list.

The city hired Denver-based advertising agency Sukle in a three-year contract to create the campaign, placing ads throughout the metro area and on social media urging people to “do more of what helps the planet, do less of what hurts it.” The ads direct viewers to a list of more than 80 actions they can take to reduce their impact on the environment at home, at work and on-the-go. 

The suggestion to “eat less meat” was initially included in the list on the city’s website, but later removed.

The campaign is funded by the Climate Protection Fund, created by a voter-approved 0.25% sales and use tax increase in 2020. The fund brought in  $50 million for climate action initiatives last year. 

See full source list below.

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The Colorado Sun partners with Gigafact to produce fact briefs — bite-sized fact checks of trending claims. Read our methodology to learn how we check claims.

References:

Resolution 25-0462, Denver City Council, accessed July 2025. Source link

Denver Climate Project, City of Denver, accessed July 2025. Source link

CASR Climate Actions, Denver Office of Climate Action, Sustainability and Resiliency accessed July 2025. Source link

Denver Climate Project, Denver Office of Climate Action, Sustainability and Resiliency, archived July 7, 2025. Source link

Bill 20-0684, Denver City Council, accessed July 2025. Source link

2024 Annual Report, Denver Office of Climate Action, Sustainability and Resiliency, accessed July 2025. Source link

Type of Story: Fact-Check

Checks a specific statement or set of statements asserted as fact.

Tyler has spent the last three years reporting on the environment, culture and local government in Colorado. Most recently, he spent time as a staff reporter and photographer for Boulder Weekly, where he covered the rapidly growing city of Longmont...