Stabroek News

France's Total quits top U.S. oil lobby in climate split

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LONDON, (Reuters) - France's Total SE yesterday became the first major global energy company to quit the main U.S. oil and gas lobby due to disagreeme­nts over its climate policies and support for easing drilling regulation­s.

Total said it would not renew its 2021 membership with the American Petroleum Institute (API) following a review of the lobby's climate positions, describing them as being only "partially aligned" with its own.

The high-profile departure from the most powerful energy lobby comes ahead of sweeping changes in policy direction in the United States, with incoming President Joe Biden promising to tackle climate change and bring the country to net-zero emissions by 2050.

"As part of our climate ambition made public in May 2020, we are committed to ensuring, in a transparen­t manner, that the industry associatio­ns of which we are a member adopt positions and messages that are aligned with those of the Group in the fight against climate change", Total Chief Executive Patrick Pouyanné said.

The withdrawal highlights a widening rift between Europe's top energy companies, which over the past year accelerate­d plans to cut emissions and build large renewable energy businesses and their U.S. rivals Exxon Mobil Corp and Chevron Corp that have largely resisted growing investor pressure to diversify.

Chevron has no plans to leave the API, company spokesman Sean Comey said. Exxon was not immediatel­y available for comment.

The announceme­nt puts pressure on Total's European rivals BP and Royal Dutch Shell to follow suit after resisting the move in recent years.

BP, Shell and Norway's Equinor on Friday said they are reviewing membership­s in trade organizati­ons and how they align on climate-related issues. Shell spokesman Curtis Moore said "API is moving closer to Shell’s own stated views" on climate change.

European oil companies have in the past pointed to the API's role in formulatin­g industry safety and operating standards as their rationale for remaining with the group.

However, in its reasons for leaving the group, Total cited the API's support for last year's rollback of U.S. regulation on emissions of methane, its differing views on pricing carbon, as well its lack of support for subsidies for electric vehicles.

The API thanked Total for its membership, but noted that it does not support subsidies for energy, saying it distorts markets.

"We believe that the world's energy and environmen­tal challenges are large enough that many different approaches are necessary to solve them, and we benefit from a diversity of views," the API said.

The group has defended its record on tackling carbon emissions, noting that the industry's technologi­cal advances have helped it cut carbon dioxide and methane emissions rates in large oil-producing regions.

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