News | National
15 Nov 2024 2:51
NZCity News
NZCity CalculatorReturn to NZCity

  • Start Page
  • Personalise
  • Sport
  • Weather
  • Finance
  • Shopping
  • Jobs
  • Horoscopes
  • Lotto Results
  • Photo Gallery
  • Site Gallery
  • TVNow
  • Dating
  • SearchNZ
  • NZSearch
  • Crime.co.nz
  • RugbyLeague
  • Make Home
  • About NZCity
  • Contact NZCity
  • Your Privacy
  • Advertising
  • Login
  • Join for Free

  •   Home > News > National

    Thousands of corporate lobbyists are at the UN climate summit in Baku. But what exactly is ‘lobbying’ and how does it work?

    An expert spells out how companies seek to influence climate policy at Cop29 and beyond.

    Christina Toenshoff, Assistant Professor of European Politics and Political Economy, Leiden University
    The Conversation


    Representatives of the world’s governments are gathered in Baku, Azerbaijan, to negotiate international climate policy at the Cop29 summit. Of the more than 30,000 participants, thousands will be representatives of companies or business associations – so-called “corporate lobbyists”.

    There’s nothing especially new about this. The business community has sought to influence climate policy since global warming first came onto the political agenda in the 1980s. But there has been a notable increase in the number of corporate lobbyists at climate summits in recent years. The number of fossil fuel lobbyists alone went from an already high 503 at Cop26 in Glasgow to well over 2,000 at Cop28 in Dubai last year. The sheer scale of the lobbying efforts at the most recent summits warrants some attention.

    Climate lobbying takes many forms. It often involves" financial contributions to political campaigns and parties, as well as gifts and promises of lucrative future positions. Of course, this is one way that companies seek to influence policy, especially in jurisdictions that allow large contributions.

    However, much lobbying revolves around the provision of information rather than direct transfers of money or gifts. When policymakers decide on complex policy solutions, they need input from experts on questions of technical and economic feasibility. Are carbon taxes or emission trading the best way to put a price on carbon emissions, for example? Should we subsidise electric vehicles or bet on hydrogen cars? And so on.

    Businesses of course want to exert influence over those inputs, so that when policymakers learn about carbon pricing or electric vehicles, it comes from a source aligned with companies’ interests. Thus, much lobbying takes the form of participation in hearings, the submission of technical comments to policy consultations, participation in expert committees, presentations and research briefs.

    Beyond this, companies and their associations often provide so-called legislative subsidies by actually drafting complex legal texts and amendments for sympathetic politicians. For instance, laws drafted by corporate lobbyists aimed at criminalising opposition to oil and gas pipelines have now been passed in 17 US states. In the UK, briefing by a thinktank linked to fossil fuel money helped the government draft recent anti-protest laws aimed at climate activists.

    Lobbying can also be aimed at the public, as when interest groups conduct public campaigns on the merits or dangers of a policy. Most notoriously, coalitions of polluting industries, such as the Global Climate Coalition in the US, sowed doubt on the soundness of climate science even while internal research by companies in those same industries confirmed the link between fossil fuels and climate change.

    Public campaigns by business groups have also targeted specific climate policies, such as the Kyoto protocol and carbon taxes.

    Sponsors, participants, official delegates

    The yearly UN climate summits are an important forum for lobbying. Business associations that represent companies can register as non-government organisations with observer status, which gives them access to meetings, workshops and official draft documents. It also gives them the right to distribute documents to country delegations and host side events or exhibits.

    More recently, individual companies have been invited to sponsor the events in exchange for privileged access to negotiators. Countries also sometimes include company representatives in their official country delegations, which allows them to provide direct input on draft resolutions. Shell, for example, has been a member of the Brazilian and Nigerian delegations at previous Cops.

    Not all climate lobbying is aimed at obstruction. Indeed, in the run up to the Paris summit in 2015, some business leaders supported an “ambitious” climate deal. This is often credited as one reason for the successful negotiation of the Paris agreement that year. Similarly, the We Mean Business Coalition organised a letter that called for the phaseout of fossil fuels ahead of last year’s summit in Dubai.

    Nonetheless, the most intense lobbying, both at the Cops and nationally, is often conducted by polluting industries. While 200 businesses signed the letter ahead of Dubai, more than 2,400 delegates at that same conference were associated with the fossil fuel industry. Fossil fuel companies and other polluting industries have blocked binding international climate targets and promoted policy approaches that are less costly to business and less effective, such as the allocation of free emission permits to industrial polluters in the EU.

    Difficult to trace

    If many companies lobby against effective climate policy, how do they get away with it? My research shows that lobbying that clearly obstructs climate action can harm a company’s reputation. Yet, these companies are sophisticated actors that employ several strategies to limit reputational damage from climate obstruction.

    For one, lobbying against climate policy is often strategically conducted in a way that is more difficult to trace and attribute to individual firms. Companies can fund campaigns through untraceable “dark money”, they can lobby behind closed doors, or join Cops through unexpected delegations that make it harder for activists to map their participation. For example, employees of the French oil and gas giant TotalEnergies attended Cop27 through an obscure German organisation that did not disclose who its delegates worked for.

    Companies tend to rely heavily on their associations to conduct the most obstructive lobbying. This distributes the blame for lobbying among all competitors, so no company can easily be singled out.

    Some companies invest a lot of money in advertising campaigns that portray them in a greener light and highlight their more climate-friendly projects. This is despite the fact that neither their policy advocacy nor their core business decisions are climate-friendly. It is important that civil society actors and academic researchers call them out on such strategies.


    Imagine weekly climate newsletter

    Don’t have time to read about climate change as much as you’d like? Get a weekly roundup in your inbox instead. Every Wednesday, The Conversation’s environment editor writes Imagine, a short email that goes a little deeper into just one climate issue. Join the 40,000+ readers who’ve subscribed so far.


    The Conversation

    Christina Toenshoff has received external funding for her research from the Climate Social Sciences Network. She is affiliated with the NGO "The Good Lobby" as an expert advisor on a project related to business associations.

    This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license.
    © 2024 TheConversation, NZCity

     Other National News
     14 Nov: Police have released the names of three people killed, in a crash between a freight train and car at a crossing on Hamilton's Peachgrove Road, early yesterday
     14 Nov: A person's died after their tractor rolled down a bank on a rural farm south of Auckland
     14 Nov: The Police dive squad is searching reservoirs - as they hunt a 77-year-old last missing from Porirua since Sunday
     14 Nov: The Police watchdog's found Police were justified in fatally shooting a man in Lower Hutt's Wainuiomata in November last year
     14 Nov: Canterbury University is vowing to ensure student care is up to scratch - after an outbreak of gastro illness in university halls, affecting more than 100
     14 Nov: The Incas used mysterious stringy objects called ‘khipus’ to record data. We just got a step closer to understanding them
     14 Nov: Orbital by Samantha Harvey wins the 2024 Booker prize – a short but powerful story urging us to save the planet
     Top Stories

    RUGBY RUGBY
    The All Blacks name their team to face France overnight tonight - with a few intriguing decisions to make More...


    BUSINESS BUSINESS
    New Zealand's on track to have two-percent inflation by year's end More...



     Today's News

    Politics:
    The Treaty Principles Bill has passed its first reading - after a disruptive haka in the House, and two MPs being booted out 21:57

    Entertainment:
    Tom Hardy will never be tempted by a move to Los Angeles 21:32

    Rugby:
    The All Blacks name their team to face France overnight tonight - with a few intriguing decisions to make 21:17

    International:
    The 7 best things Abbie Chatfield told Yumi Stynes about sex, love and life 21:07

    Entertainment:
    Luke Evans has been "through a lot" with his religious family after coming out as gay 21:02

    Entertainment:
    Kyle Richards was "terrified" to discuss her sexuality with her daughters 20:32

    Entertainment:
    Selena Gomez once hired out an entire botanical garden for a date with boyfriend Benny Blanco 20:02

    Entertainment:
    Britney Spears has reportedly reunited with her youngest son 19:32

    Entertainment:
    Francesca Farago has given birth to twins 19:02

    Law and Order:
    Police have released the names of three people killed, in a crash between a freight train and car at a crossing on Hamilton's Peachgrove Road, early yesterday 18:57


     News Search






    Power Search


    © 2024 New Zealand City Ltd