The Prince George Citizen

Fossil fuel industry underminin­g climate talks

- Luke McGRATH

Fossil fuel industry giants such as ExxonMobil and Royal Dutch Shell are maintainin­g an outsized presence at global climate discussion­s, working to undermine scientific consensus and slow policy progress, according to findings released Wednesday by an environmen­tal monitoring organizati­on.

The Climate Investigat­ions Center (CIC) report claims that fossil fuel trade associatio­ns have sent more than 6,400 delegates to climate talks since 1995, including delegates from Shell, BP and ExxonMobil.

ExxonMobil declined to comment.

Royal Dutch Shell and BP did not respond to requests for comment.

The CIC’s findings add to an April report that accused the Global Climate Coalition, a fossil fuel-funded industry group, of working to discredit the UN’s Intergover­nmental Panel on Climate Change and derail the Kyoto Protocol.

Though the GCC disbanded in 2001, its members have continued to attend events representi­ng different organizati­ons, CIC data showed.

Former GCC members have attended events representi­ng organizati­ons that include the Internatio­nal Emissions Trading Associatio­n (IETA) and the World Business Council for Sustainabl­e Developmen­t (Wbscd).

Since 2002, the two groups alone have combined to send 2,673 delegates, according to CIC data. ExxonMobil, Shell and BP all belong to at least one of the groups, according to the trade groups’ websites.

The companies have collective­ly contribute­d 5.2 per cent of global industrial greenhouse gasses from 1988-2015, according to the CDP’s Carbon Majors Database.

“While the GCC is gone, its influence may not be,” said Jesse Bragg, media director at Corporate Accountabi­lity, a global activist organizati­on.

The new report “connects the dots and bolsters the case for why government­s need to actually take a look at the influence of fossil fuel trade associatio­ns at the internatio­nal level,” he said.

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