As nations prepare to negotiate a climate treaty in Paris in December, the role of corporations in the fight against climate change is coming under increased scrutiny.
While much has been made of calls by the private sector for more ambitious carbon cuts at a national level, a view echoed in the past few days at New York Climate Week, evidence is growing that some companies are hindering efforts to cut greenhouse gas pollution.
The influence of business on government has been a theme in political history for centuries. Money, and the control it wields, plays a major role in US elections. In response, lawmakers there have tried to implement of a system of disclosure and transparency around financial contributions to political causes, but with very patchy results. In the European Union the system of transparency is weaker. There is a voluntary ‘Transparency Register’ where lobbyists are asked to declare themselves, but a recent report estimated that more than half of all entries are inaccurate.
The particular focus on the influence of companies on climate change policy, though, is more recent.
A report this month from the London-based NGO
InfluenceMap alleged that almost half of the world’s 100 largest companies, including Procter & Gamble, BMW and Boeing, are “obstructing climate change legislation.” The research evaluated companies’ public statements on the science of climate change and influence on legislation designed to mitigate carbon emissions.
InfluenceMap looked at companies’ direct influence on legislation, as well as the influence of trade groups they are members of. These trade associations represent particular industrial sectors or businesses with a particular country or region. Among groups judged to be the most insidious were the
European Chemical Industry Council, the
US Chamber of Commerce,
Business Council of Australia, and the all-powerful
Japan Business Federation, which counts almost every major Japanese firm as a member. InfluenceMap says that these groups “have all strongly opposed most climate legislation for years”.
The findings chime with research that I carried out with colleagues at the University of Westminster earlier this year, which focused just on the EU. Our report
Lobbying by Trade Associations on EU Climate Policy found that many major multinational companies with strong sustainability policies are at the same time members of trade associations that are lobbying against EU climate policy. These EU policies include attempts to strengthen the EU Emissions Trading Scheme through ‘backloading’, and targets on energy efficiency and renewable power.
Corporate hijacking of efforts to cut GHG emissions came into sharp focus at the previous milestone conference on climate change — the Copenhagen climate summit (COP15) in 2009. That summit was widely perceived to be a failure, and some blamed the obstructive lobbying of fossil fuel companies and energy-intensive industries.
In 2011, the head of the UN’s climate arm, Christiana Figueres, addressed the problem, drawing attention to economically and politically powerful resources companies that were pushing governments to maintain the fossil-fuel-dominated status quo.
The reasons to care about the influence of business on climate policy are obvious. Auden Schendler, vice president of sustainability at Aspen Skiing Company, and Mike Toffel, associate professor in the Technology and Operations Management unit of Harvard Business School, have voiced the opinion that “compared with companies’ efforts to green their operations, corporate political actions such as lobbying or campaign funding can have more influence on environmental protection, and arguably represent the greatest impact a company can have on protecting — or harming — the environment.”
“More and more, we’re seeing companies rely on their trade groups to do their dirty work of lobbying against comprehensive climate policies,” says to Gretchen Goldman of the Union of Concerned Scientists. “Companies get the delay in policy they want, while preventing nations from acting to fight climate change. It is unacceptable that companies can obstruct climate action in this way without any accountability.”
Scrutiny to continue
The coming climate change summit at COP21 in Paris may have particularly motivated policymakers and civil society organisations to scrutinise the activities of companies, but interest in the lobbying activities of multinational companies and their trade groups is unlikely to go away any time soon. InfluenceMap will now be continuously monitoring the activities of companies and their trade associations, and has plans to expand to include Chinese e-commerce company Alibaba in their next round of analysis.
This scrutiny puts the onus back onto companies (and investors) to ensure that their staff and the lobbyists that represent them are lobbying on climate policy in a way that is clearly aligned with the long-term interests of those companies, the economy and the climate.