Morning Sun

At UN climate talks, fossil fuel interests have hundreds of employees on hand

- By Mary Katherine Wildeman and Michael Phillis

At least 1,300 employees of organizati­ons representi­ng fossil fuel interests registered to attend this year’s United Nations climate talks in Dubai, more than three times the number found in an Associated Press analysis of last year’s talks, as new rules took effect requiring attendees to disclose their employment.

Aside from the new disclosure rules, the figure may have been boosted by a surge in attendance as Earth staggered through a year of record heat and devastatin­g extreme weather attributed to climate change — conference registrati­ons are nearly double that of last year’s talks. The United Nations body responsibl­e for running the conference also released the details of far more attendees than in past years, including people not considered part of official state delegation­s.

The hundreds of fossil fuel-connected people make up just a tiny share of the 90,000 people who registered to attend the climate summit known as COP28. But environmen­talists have repeatedly questioned their presence at an event where meaningful negotiatio­ns have to take aim at the heart of their businesses.

Bob Deans, director of strategic engagement for the U.s.-based Natural Resources Defense Council, said his group is hoping this year’s talks are the point where oil and gas “might begin to shift from being the biggest part of the climate problem to finally being part of the fix.”

“The industry needs to turn away from a business model that relies on destroying the planet,” said Deans, whose own group registered nearly two dozen people to attend. “That business model needs to change.

Dubai must be the starting point.”

The companies represente­d by the 1,300-plus employees make up a big part of global emissions — which is also why they should have a place at the conference, they said.

COP28 President Sultan al-jaber fielded criticism in the months leading up his role presiding over COP28 because of his other job — heading up the United Arab Emirates’ national oil company. Al-jaber alluded to the question about the proper role for fossil fuel companies in his opening remarks.

“Let history reflect the fact that this is the Presidency that made a bold choice to proactivel­y engage with oil and gas companies,” al-jaber said. He went on to praise many of those companies for commitment­s to reduce emissions, but added: “I must say, it is not enough, and I know that they can do more.”

On Saturday, al-jaber announced that 50 oil companies representi­ng almost half of global production had pledged to reach nearzero methane emissions and end routine flaring by 2030. Experts and environmen­talists called it significan­t and meaningful, but still not enough.

COP28 comes as the planet faces a mounting imperative to reduce greenhouse gas emissions. Global warming reached 1.25 degrees Celsius in October compared to pre-industrial levels, according to the European Space Agency’s Copernicus Climate Change Service. And the UN warned in a pivotal September report “the window of opportunit­y to secure a livable and sustainabl­e future for all is rapidly closing.”

Fossil fuel companies have long had a hand in the talks, the first of which was in 1995. Research by the advocacy group Kick Big Polluters Out Coalition shows four of the “big five” oil and gas companies — Shell, Chevron, Totalenerg­ies and BP — have sent representa­tives to the annual climate talks nearly every year.

The four companies each said in statements they attend COP in order to advance green or low-carbon technologi­es and work toward their net-zero commitment­s. Low-carbon can mean such things as biofuels, hydrogen developmen­t and carbon capture and storage. All four have pledged to reach carbon neutrality by 2050.

The AP arrived at its tally for COP28 by analyzing the United Nations list of likely attendees to review details they offered upon registrati­on, including the company they represente­d. Those details were checked against lists of operators and owners of coal mines, oil fields and natural gas plants, as well as manufactur­ers of carbon-intensive materials like steel and cement. It also included trade associatio­ns that represent those interests.

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