Current:Home > ScamsTotal Accused of Campaign to Play Down Climate Risk From Fossil Fuels -AssetTrainer
Total Accused of Campaign to Play Down Climate Risk From Fossil Fuels
View
Date:2025-04-24 16:00:52
The French oil and gas giant TotalEnergies was aware of the link between fossil fuels and rising global temperatures 50 years ago but worked with other oil majors to play down the risks for at least three decades, according to internal company documents and interviews with former executives.
The research, published on Wednesday by three historians in the peer-reviewed Global Environmental Change journal, outlines alleged efforts by the French energy group to cast doubt over emerging climate science in the 1970s, 1980s and 1990s, while pushing back against emissions reduction and climate-related taxes.
The study follows similar allegations made against other oil and gas majors in recent years, including ExxonMobil and Royal Dutch Shell, some of whose scientists have also been shown to have identified the climate risks associated with fossil fuels decades ago. The revelations come at an awkward time for Total and the wider oil industry as it seeks to regain public trust and build support for new strategies focused on cleaner fuels.
Total rebranded itself Total Energies this year as part of a pivot to tackle the climate crisis and achieve net zero emissions by 2050, but some climate activists have argued this is too little too late.
“These revelations provide proof that TotalEnergies and the other oil and gas majors have stolen the precious time of a generation to stem the climate crisis,” advocacy groups 350.org and Notre Affaire à Tous said in response to the report.
The research shows that Total personnel received the first warnings about the potential for “catastrophic global warming from its products” by at least 1971.
Total’s company magazine, Total Information, warned that year of a possible increase in average temperatures of 1 to 1.5 degrees Celsius, partial melting of the polar ice caps and a “significant” sea level rise “if the consumption of coal and oil keeps the same rhythm in the years to come”, the researchers found.
Despite the warning, Total said little on the issue for most of the next two decades, according to the research. The historians reviewed all editions of Total’s company magazine from 1965 to 2010 and after the 1971 article, did not find another reference to climate change until 1989.
In the interim, as public discussion of emissions and global warming gained prominence, Total began to work with other oil companies to cast doubt on the link between fossil fuels and climate change, the historians said.
At a 1988 meeting at Total’s headquarters in Paris, the global oil and gas industry association IPIECA formed a new “ad hoc” group, later renamed as the “working group on global climate change,” chaired by a scientist from Exxon, according to the research.
In a 1989 strategy paper, the Exxon executive recommended emphasising uncertainties in climate science in order to defeat public policies that might shift the energy mix away from fossil fuels.
A former executive at the oil company Elf, which Total acquired in 1999, told the historians that the French oil and gas industry had been happy to allow Exxon to take the lead, given its “weight in the scientific community”.
Through the IPIECA, Total, Exxon and other oil companies approved funding in the 1990s of scientific research that could “sharpen” the industry’s ability to highlight the limitations of current climate models and “potentially make global warming appear less alarming”, the research said.
By the time the UN framework convention on climate change was ratified in Kyoto in 1997, Total was no longer prepared to overtly attack the scientific consensus on climate change, the historians said. Instead, it shifted to emphasising “equivocal descriptions” of global warming and playing down the significance of the available evidence.
Total said it was “wrong to claim that the climate risk was concealed by Total or Elf in the 1970s or since,” adding that the company’s historic knowledge of climate risk was no different from that published in scientific journals at the time.
“TotalEnergies deplores the process of pointing the finger at a situation from 50 years ago, without highlighting the efforts, changes, progress and investments made since then,” it said.
Exxon said it had not seen the academic paper and could not immediately comment.
This story originally appeared in the Oct. 20, 2021 edition of The Financial Times
Copyright The Financial Times Limited 2021
Reprinted with permission.
veryGood! (1)
Related
- Selena Gomez's "Weird Uncles" Steve Martin and Martin Short React to Her Engagement
- Los Angeles home that appears to belong to model and actor Cara Delevingne is destroyed in fire
- WATCH: NC State forces overtime with incredible bank-shot 3-pointer, defeats Virginia
- Former Tennessee Titans coach Mike Vrabel hired by Cleveland Browns as coaching consultant
- Apple iOS 18.2: What to know about top features, including Genmoji, AI updates
- When it’s St. Patrick’s Day in New Orleans, get ready to catch a cabbage
- North Dakota voters will decide whether 81 is too old to serve in Congress
- Man, woman arrested in connection to dead baby found in Florida trash bin
- Trump suggestion that Egypt, Jordan absorb Palestinians from Gaza draws rejections, confusion
- PETA tells WH, Jill Biden annual Easter Egg Roll can still be 'egg-citing' with potatoes
Ranking
- Trump suggestion that Egypt, Jordan absorb Palestinians from Gaza draws rejections, confusion
- California fertility doctor gets 15 years to life for wife’s murder
- Absurd look, serious message: Why a man wearing a head bubble spoofed his way onto local TV
- A new front opens over South Dakota ballot initiatives: withdrawing signatures from petitions
- North Carolina justices rule for restaurants in COVID
- For Today Only, Save Up to 57% Off the Internet-Viral Always Pans 2.0
- Judge mulls third contempt case against Arizona for failing to improve prison health care
- Identity of massive $1.765 billion Powerball jackpot winners revealed in California
Recommendation
Trump issues order to ban transgender troops from serving openly in the military
Squid Game Star O Yeong-su Found Guilty of Sexual Misconduct
'Squid Game' actor O Yeong-Su, 79, convicted of sexual misconduct for 2017 incident: Reports
Weekly ski trip turns into overnight ordeal when about 50 women get stranded in bus during snowstorm
Former Syrian official arrested in California who oversaw prison charged with torture
Oprah Winfrey opens up about exiting Weight Watchers after using weight loss drug
Aaron Donald and his 'superpowers' changed the NFL landscape forever
What to know about mewing: Netflix doc 'Open Wide' rekindles interest in beauty trend