Fossil fuel firms ‘have humanity by the throat’,
says UN head in blistering attack
António Guterres compares climate inaction to tobacco
firms dismissing links between smoking and cancer
Fiona
Harvey Environment correspondent
Fri 17 Jun
2022 14.00 BST
Fossil fuel
companies and the banks that finance them “have humanity by the throat”, the UN
secretary general has said, in a “blistering” attack on the industry and its
backers, who are pulling in record profits amid energy prices sent soaring by
the Ukraine war.
António
Guterres compared fossil fuel companies to the tobacco companies that continued
to push their addictive products while concealing or attacking health advice
that showed clear links between smoking and cancer, the first time he has drawn
such a parallel.
He said:
“We seem trapped in a world where fossil fuel producers and financiers have
humanity by the throat. For decades, the fossil fuel industry has invested
heavily in pseudoscience and public relations – with a false narrative to
minimise their responsibility for climate change and undermine ambitious
climate policies.
“They
exploited precisely the same scandalous tactics as big tobacco decades before.
Like tobacco interests, fossil fuel interests and their financial accomplices
must not escape responsibility.”
Speaking to
the Major Economies Forum, a climate conference organised by the White House,
Guterres also castigated governments that are failing to rein in fossil fuels,
and in many cases seeking increased production of gas, oil and even coal, the
dirtiest fossil fuel.
He said:
“Nothing could be more clear or present than the danger of fossil fuel
expansion. Even in the short-term, fossil fuels don’t make political or economic
sense.”
The US
president, Joe Biden, is travelling to Saudi Arabia to push for more oil
production, some EU countries are seeking to source gas from Africa and
developing countries around the world, and the UK is licensing new gas fields
in the North Sea.
Sign up to
First Edition, our free daily newsletter – every weekday morning at 7am BST
Governments
are concerned about soaring energy prices and rising food bills. Energy experts
have advised more renewable energy and improvements to energy efficiency as
better alternatives, but much of their advice has been ignored.
The
Guardian understands Guterres has been incensed by the recent behaviour of
fossil fuel companies, which have been reaping a bonanza from energy prices
sent soaring by the Ukraine war. Much of these bumper profits are likely to be
invested in fresh exploration and expansion of fossil fuel resources.
The
Guardian recently uncovered nearly 200 new projects – “carbon bombs” – that if
completed would put paid to the world’s chances of limiting global temperatures
to 1.5C above pre-industrial levels.
Guterres is
understood to be furious that, six months after the Cop26 climate summit, and
after three dire reports from the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change –
the “starkest warning yet” from climate scientists – countries and businesses
are ignoring the science and squandering opportunities to put the world on a
greener path, when renewable energy is cheaper and safer than fossil fuels.
The
International Energy Agency warned last year that all new exploration and
development of oil, gas and coal must cease this year to hold to the 1.5C
threshold.
A senior UN
official told the Guardian: “Even given the secretary general’s impressive
track record of speaking truth to power, this is a blistering intervention, to
the leaders of the world’s largest economies. The fossil fuel industry is
taking a page out of big tobacco’s playbook, and that is utterly unacceptable
to the secretary general. He’s determined to call out the fossil fuel industry
and its financiers, and he won’t be constrained by any diplomatic niceties.”
The
official added: “For the secretary general, this is the fight of our lives, and
he won’t take a backwards step.”
The latest
round of UN talks on the climate crisis, intended to pave the way for the next
major summit, Cop27 this November in Egypt, ended without much progress in Bonn
on Thursday evening. The outgoing UN climate chief, Patricia Espinosa, warned
there was “still a lot to do” before Cop27, where countries are supposed to make
good on promises made at Cop26 to strengthen their emissions-cutting plans in
line with the 1.5C limit.
Sem comentários:
Enviar um comentário