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Oil, gas giants spend €250 million on EU lobbying: Green groups

- AFP Paris

The five biggest publicly listed oil and gas companies and trade groups representi­ng them spent more than €250 million ($278 million) lobbying the EU to influence climate action since 2010, environmen­tal groups said on Thursday.

Research showed that BP, Chevron, ExxonMobil, Shell and Total, as well as trade groups acting on their behalf, have held at least 327 high-level meetings with European Commission officials since Commission President JeanClaude Juncker took office in 2014 — an average of more than one a week.

The findings came from publicly listed documents, and companies who responded to requests for comments said there was no conflict of interest in their executives meeting high-level EU policymake­rs.

But green groups said the money spent on access to officials showed to what extent oil and gas firms were seeking to influence decisions in Brussels.

“This is part of a long trail of the fossil fuel industry delaying, weakening and torpedoing muchneeded climate action,” said Pascoe Sabido, a researcher and campaigner with Corporate Europe Observator­y.

The EU is seen as one of the global leaders when it comes to climate action.

But there are fears its member states are not phasing out fossil fuels quickly enough to comply with the 2015 Paris climate accord, which commits nations to limit warming to “well below” 2 degrees Celsius (3.6 Fahrenheit). A Commission spokeswoma­n said it was “good practice that politician­s and officials meet with external actors.”

She added that “some meetings” with oil and gas representa­tives focused on “renewables and the ways to decarboniz­e our economy.” Last year the Internatio­nal Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) called for a radical drawdown in fossil fuel use to hit the safer 1.5C cap laid out in the Paris deal.

Yet global emissions are rising year on year, and environmen­tal groups fear major EU gas infrastruc­ture projects in the pipeline could lock the continent into fossil fuels well beyond the IPCC’s deadlines.

The investigat­ion by Corporate Europe Observator­y, Food & Water Europe, Friends of the Earth Europe, and Greenpeace EU looked at companies’ own declaratio­ns and the EU’s lobby transparen­cy register and published meetings. It found that the five firms declared spending of €123.3 million ($137 million) on EU lobbying between 2010-2018. Trade associatio­ns representi­ng them spent an additional €128 million in that period.

In April, the watchdog Global Witness calculated that oil and gas majors were planning to spend $5 trillion (€4.5 trillion) on new exploratio­n by 2030, a figure it said was “poles apart” from the Paris goals. A spokeswome­n from Total said the figures contained in Thursday’s report “in no way reflect” what the group spends on lobbying.

“Total is convinced that a collective approach is necessary to respond to the magnitude of the climate issue,” she said. An ExxonMobil spokesman said the giant “complies fully with the requiremen­ts of the EU Transparen­cy Register.”

“ExxonMobil believes that climate change risks warrant action and it’s going to take all of us — business, government­s and consumers — to make meaningful progress,” he said.

A spokeswoma­n for Shell said it “firmly rejected” the report’s premise.

 ?? File/AFP ?? Climate activists stage a demonstrat­ion in New York City, US.
File/AFP Climate activists stage a demonstrat­ion in New York City, US.

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