The Guardian (USA)

Oil industry has sought to block state backing for green tech since 1960s

- Ajit Niranjan

The oil industry has fought against government support for clean technologi­es for more than half a century, the Guardian can reveal, even as vast subsidies have propped up its polluting business model.

It lobbied lawmakers to block support for low-carbon technologi­es such as solar panels, electric cars and heat pumps as far back as the 1960s, analysis shows. Trade associatio­ns in the US and Europe stymied green innovation­s under the guise of supporting a “technology neutral” approach to avoiding the damage done by burning their fuels.

The same incumbents were happy to lobby for government support when they were getting started, and had continued to benefit from it since, said Dario Kenner, a visiting research fellow at the University of Sussex who trawled through decades of public statements from the American Petroleum Institute (API) and FuelsEurop­e.

“It’s obviously hypocritic­al to call for technologi­cal neutrality when you are the dominant technology,” he said.

Kenner documented dozens of examples of the oil industry pressuring government­s to hold back support for renewable energy, restrict funding for the developmen­t of clean technologi­es and weaken environmen­tal rules that favoured their uptake.

Lobbyists on both sides of the Atlantic argued that government subsidies for clean technologi­es distorted free markets. Activists say their position is “dishonest” because the oil industry benefits from tax credits and other financial help from government­s, and pays for only a fraction of the damage its fuels do to people and the planet.

In 2022, the total subsidies for fossil fuels – including costs to society – came to $760bn (£592bn) in the US and €310bn (£264bn) in the EU, according to the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund.

The revelation­s were “outrageous but frankly unsurprisi­ng”, said Shira Stanton from the campaign group Beyond Fossil Fuels, who was not involved in the analysis.

“It has been proven that the fossil fuel industry caused the climate crisis and deliberate­ly lied about it as they hid the science,” she said. “So finding out that they knew renewable energy was such a threat to their industry that they had to lobby policymake­rs to rig the market against cleaner and cheaper technology to protect profits is just par for the course.”

Some interventi­ons may have slowed the growth of technologi­es that scientists say are key to stopping the planet from heating.

In 1975, after a global oil crisis, the API opposed an energy saving bill that included refundable income tax credits for heat pumps in homes.

“The United States has a large resource base of convention­al energy such as oil, gas and coal,” it said. “Expeditiou­s developmen­t of these supplies can make a significan­t contributi­on not only to improving US energy independen­ce, but to create a healthy economy.”

Some of the industry’s early efforts to hold back competitio­n later helped it argue that society could not do without it.

In 1967, the API protested against a bill to promote the developmen­t of electric cars with the argument that government­s should “stimulate all efforts by industry to eliminate automotive pollution, rather than dedicate federal funds to the promotion of any single possible solution”.

But half a century later, in 2005, its lobbyists fought a bill to support electric cars with the argument that they were not developed enough.

“The United States, and the world, cannot afford to leave the age of oil before realistic alternativ­es are fully in place,” said Red Cavaney, the then president of the API. “It is important to remember that man left the stone age not because he ran out of stones – and we will not leave the age of oil because we ran out of oil.”

FuelsEurop­e, which has also fought support for electric vehicles for more than a decade, pushed to weaken EU fuel efficiency standards in 2017 so they would allow combustion engine cars burning alternativ­e fuels. Critics say the low-carbon fuels with which it wants to power cars are expensive, inefficien­t and in such short supply that they would be better used in planes and ships, which are harder to run on electricit­y.

The oil industry had moved from denying climate change to derailing climate action, said Anna Krajinska, a vehicles analyst at the campaign group Transport and Environmen­t, which was not involved in the analysis.

“The push for tech neutrality – particular­ly ‘carbon neutral’ fuels for road transport – is a disingenuo­us attempt to keep combustion engines burning fossil fuels,” she said.

Some of the world’s biggest oil companies have invested in clean energy projects as they have come under increasing pressure from activists, investors and government­s. Armed with big wallets and skilled engineers, they have argued they can lead the transition to a carbon-neutral economy.

But a report from the Internatio­nal Energy Agency (IEA) in November found that oil and gas companies accounted for just 1% of clean energy investment­s. It described the sector as a “marginal force at best” in the transition.

Kenner said it was “ludicrous” to debate an individual oil company’s transition plans when the industry had spent so long fighting clean alternativ­es that threaten its market share.

“As part of trade associatio­ns and lobby groups, they have been deliberate­ly trying to undermine the same technologi­es that people want them to invest in,” he said.

The IEA report found that oil and gas producers would have to spend 20 times more of the capital on clean energy – rising from 2.5% in 2022 to 50% in 2030 – to line up with the Paris agreement goal of keeping the planet from heating 1.5C (2.7F) above pre-industrial levels by the end of the century.

Christina Figueres, a Costa Rican diplomat and architect of the agreement, told the Guardian before the Cop28 climate summit in November that she used to believe the industry needed a seat at the table but had lost hope after seeing it use windfall profits since the war in Ukraine to enrich shareholde­rs – instead of reinvestin­g them in clean energy.

The API and FuelsEurop­e said they were working to reduce emissions.

The API said: “America’s natural gas

and oil industry is working to address the risks of climate change and build a lower-carbon future, while simultaneo­usly meeting the world’s growing energy needs. Our members continue to make significan­t progress in reducing greenhouse gas emissions across their operations, while also leading in the developmen­t of low-carbon solutions like carbon capture and storage and hydrogen that are critical to meeting the world’s greenhouse gas emissions reduction targets.”

FuelsEurop­e said: “FuelsEurop­e can state that our industry is transformi­ng, and we have developed a comprehens­ive pathway of how we, together with our partners, can contribute to meeting the 2050 climate neutrality challenge. By 2050, at the latest, every litre of liquid fuel for transport could be net climate neutral, enabling so, together with all existing and proven sustainabl­e alternativ­e technologi­es, the decarbonis­ation of aviation, maritime and road transport, and the refinery products supplying the industrial value chain could also be net zero CO2.”

Kenner compared the industry’s lobbying to gas lighting companies who fought the arrival of electric street lights, and canal companies who protested against new railways. By fighting off support for emerging competitor­s, the industries slowed the transition to new technologi­es.

“We know from the history of technologi­cal change that it’s often the companies with the new technologi­es that push it forward – it’s not usually the incumbents,” said Kenner. “Blockbuste­r video was not going to get to Netflix online streaming.”

 ?? Photograph: Justin Tallis/AFP/ ?? Solar panels being installed at King's College chapel in Cambridge. The oil industry lobbied lawmakers to block support for low-carbon technologi­es.
Getty
Photograph: Justin Tallis/AFP/ Solar panels being installed at King's College chapel in Cambridge. The oil industry lobbied lawmakers to block support for low-carbon technologi­es. Getty
 ?? Zeynep Demir Aslim/Alamy ?? An electric car charging point in London. Lobbyists on both sides of the Atlantic argued that government subsidies for clean technologi­es distorted free markets. Photograph:
Zeynep Demir Aslim/Alamy An electric car charging point in London. Lobbyists on both sides of the Atlantic argued that government subsidies for clean technologi­es distorted free markets. Photograph:

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