The Japan Times - COP28 puts out welcome mat to lobbyists

EUR -
AED 4.257825
AFN 73.041018
ALL 95.873009
AMD 437.352583
ANG 2.075387
AOA 1063.151672
ARS 1613.58108
AUD 1.673905
AWG 2.089782
AZN 1.973845
BAM 1.954333
BBD 2.334618
BDT 142.577309
BGN 1.981739
BHD 0.437687
BIF 3437.561568
BMD 1.15938
BND 1.487067
BOB 8.009404
BRL 5.97753
BSD 1.159165
BTN 107.581834
BWP 15.765053
BYN 3.447206
BYR 22723.847126
BZD 2.331251
CAD 1.608831
CDF 2660.776779
CHF 0.920201
CLF 0.026806
CLP 1058.468183
CNY 7.967264
CNH 7.972674
COP 4258.889516
CRC 538.925783
CUC 1.15938
CUP 30.723569
CVE 110.722703
CZK 24.516831
DJF 206.04483
DKK 7.472801
DOP 70.143272
DZD 153.949838
EGP 62.050135
ERN 17.390699
ETB 182.022293
FJD 2.613012
FKP 0.879391
GBP 0.871048
GEL 3.118896
GGP 0.879391
GHS 12.753478
GIP 0.879391
GMD 85.21678
GNF 10179.356057
GTQ 8.867307
GYD 242.600498
HKD 9.086698
HNL 30.862654
HRK 7.536546
HTG 152.154348
HUF 383.24522
IDR 19636.418305
ILS 3.636337
IMP 0.879391
INR 107.408495
IQD 1518.208052
IRR 1529077.238778
ISK 144.412139
JEP 0.879391
JMD 183.321638
JOD 0.822032
JPY 183.994179
KES 150.777075
KGS 101.387493
KHR 4649.699016
KMF 494.765613
KPW 1043.376276
KRW 1755.046257
KWD 0.358781
KYD 0.966029
KZT 551.044098
LAK 25451.296237
LBP 103411.591452
LKR 365.40421
LRD 213.152204
LSL 19.645662
LTL 3.423348
LVL 0.701297
LYD 7.390987
MAD 10.811232
MDL 20.418822
MGA 4840.411584
MKD 61.660687
MMK 2435.168612
MNT 4142.142525
MOP 9.359182
MRU 46.52622
MUR 54.247415
MVR 17.912336
MWK 2013.843377
MXN 20.666755
MYR 4.66181
MZN 74.153892
NAD 19.645738
NGN 1599.978701
NIO 42.560709
NOK 11.261423
NPR 172.131476
NZD 2.01633
OMR 0.445773
PAB 1.15919
PEN 4.032302
PGK 5.053699
PHP 69.770824
PKR 323.696816
PLN 4.283526
PYG 7528.253101
QAR 4.225358
RON 5.098146
RSD 117.335075
RUB 93.098607
RWF 1693.854115
SAR 4.351688
SBD 9.286604
SCR 16.275631
SDG 696.7875
SEK 10.912675
SGD 1.487316
SHP 0.869835
SLE 28.512249
SLL 24311.630526
SOS 662.585427
SRD 43.319095
STD 23996.824298
STN 24.926669
SVC 10.142345
SYP 128.398205
SZL 19.634144
THB 37.807266
TJS 11.084355
TMT 4.05783
TND 3.378723
TOP 2.791508
TRY 51.582667
TTD 7.867537
TWD 37.119883
TZS 3002.793635
UAH 50.722498
UGX 4317.890035
USD 1.15938
UYU 47.11444
UZS 14144.435668
VES 548.763749
VND 30532.271126
VUV 139.408472
WST 3.220425
XAF 655.501836
XAG 0.015358
XAU 0.000242
XCD 3.133282
XCG 2.088923
XDR 0.824264
XOF 654.469842
XPF 119.331742
YER 276.657015
ZAR 19.492823
ZMK 10435.815284
ZMW 22.34239
ZWL 373.319873
  • CMSD

    0.0500

    22.15

    +0.23%

  • CMSC

    0.0900

    21.99

    +0.41%

  • JRI

    0.2200

    12.52

    +1.76%

  • NGG

    2.2400

    86.84

    +2.58%

  • AZN

    3.5100

    200.73

    +1.75%

  • BCC

    -0.7700

    75.08

    -1.03%

  • RIO

    1.5200

    94.81

    +1.6%

  • BCE

    0.1400

    25.38

    +0.55%

  • BTI

    -0.5800

    57.89

    -1%

  • RBGPF

    -13.5000

    69

    -19.57%

  • GSK

    0.8000

    55.99

    +1.43%

  • RYCEF

    0.9500

    16

    +5.94%

  • VOD

    0.1100

    15.13

    +0.73%

  • BP

    -0.8300

    46.17

    -1.8%

  • RELX

    0.0800

    33.23

    +0.24%

COP28 puts out welcome mat to lobbyists
COP28 puts out welcome mat to lobbyists / Photo: Jewel SAMAD - AFP

COP28 puts out welcome mat to lobbyists

"All views are welcome. All views are needed," declared Sultan Al Jaber, president of the UN's COP28 and head of the Emirates state oil and gas company in the run-up to the climate talks in Dubai.

Text size:

That welcome also extends to lobbyists and big oil companies, some of whom will be part of national delegations when negotiations start on Thursday.

Here we look at some of the questions that raises.

- Are lobbies allowed at COP? -

"Leaders, experts and people of influence" come together in the COP's "blue zone", where talks take place, the UN states, without mentioning lobbyists.

But lobbyists can get accreditation by joining a national delegation or from one of the 2,000 "observer" groups made up of NGOs and professional groups.

"When people think about lobbying, they think about behind-closed-doors meetings between a company or their representatives and a policymaker. And that's certainly a lot of it," Faye Holder, program manager at think tank InfluenceMap, told AFP.

But it can also "include things like social media posts, advertising, sponsorships, the use of trade groups or astroturf groups", fake organisations made to look like grassroots groups, she said.

The lack of clear rules at the talks about conflict of interest has long been criticised.

Indeed, hosts the UAE were accused this week of using its role as COP28 hosts to discuss fossil fuel deals with other governments, according to leaked documents obtained by the BBC. COP28 dismissed the reports as "inaccurate".

Until this year, the UN did not oblige delegates to reveal their links to the organisation they were accredited with or who they are employed by, making it extremely difficult to detect lobbyists.

Some 65 members of the US Congress and the European Parliament wrote to the UN to voice their "profound concern that current rules... permit private sector polluters to exert undue influence" on the talks.

A report by high level experts mandated by the UN called for "non-state actors to publicly disclose their trade association affiliations" and said they cannot be allowed to "lobby to undermine ambitious government climate policies either directly" or indirectly.

- A record number at COP28? -

The last COP in Egypt set a new record for lobbyists, with 636 official delegates working for fossil fuel companies, according to Global Witness, which combed through participants' CVs.

The NGO told AFP that that record will be broken again in Dubai.

The umbrella group Kick Big Polluters Out claims that at least 7,200 lobbyists working for fossil fuel interests have been accredited to COP summits over the last two decades.

And that is only the "tip of the iceberg", they claim, with many passing under the radar.

Kick Big Polluters Out said lobbyists sometimes outnumber both the delegations from some of the countries most vulnerable to climate change and activists from NGOs.

Many state-owned oil and gas companies also form part of their countries' national delegations.

COP28, which will have a record 70,000 delegates, has thrown the doors open to the private sector, with oil and gas majors officially invited along with other polluting industries.

Ironically, according to the experts, it is perhaps the first time that fossil fuel producers' part in the talks has been addressed so openly. COP28 president Jaber told AFP this week that "everyone needs to be held accountable".

Some NGOs, however, have appealed for a boycott of the talks, while others want to counter lobbyists by turning up themselves in large numbers.

- How can lobbyists affect the talks? -

One of the clearest examples of the influence of the oil and gas companies on a COP was the Paris Agreement in 2015. Its Article 6 created a system of exchange of carbon credits, something the industry had demanded for years.

David Hone, Shell's chief climate advisor, admitted that they spent four years pushing "for the need for carbon unit trading to be part of the Paris Agreement.

"We can take some credit for the fact that Article 6 is even there at all," he told a 2018 conference organised by IETA, a lobby group founded by oil companies that will have dozens of delegates at COP28.

In Dubai, the lobbies could again have a strong influence on the language of the agreements "and what it means", said Holder, particularly the vaunting of carbon capture, green hydrogen and "low-carbon gas" as possible solutions.

She said the big question will be around the phrase "phasing out fossil fuels", and if this might be altered to "unabated fossil fuels", which means without carbon capture, "which is a sort of sneaky word that makes quite a big difference", and gives the oil industry lots of wriggle room.

S.Ogawa--JT