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Conflict of interest: Australia stoops to new low at UN climate talks

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Friday May 12, 2017: Australia’s support for fossil fuel companies’ participation in UN discussions on climate is a new low, says Greenpeace Australia Pacific CEO, David Ritter, citing a clear conflict of interest.

Government representatives from the nearly 200 countries who are signed on to the Paris Agreement have gathered for high level talks in Bonn, Germany, this week at the United Nations Climate Change Conference.

While countries like China and India have been calling for tighter rules on business groups, at a meeting on Tuesday, the Australian representative vigorously defended the right of fossil fuel companies, including ExxonMobil and Shell—two of the world’s biggest polluters—to participate in the negotiations.

Fossil fuel lobbyists have long had backdoor access to United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) treaty and climate policy talks, effectively delaying, weakening and blocking progress for two decades. But unlike many other UN entities, no conflict of interest rules currently exist in the UNFCCC process.

“It is outrageous and disgusting to imagine representatives of the Australian government would defend such a flagrant conflict of interest. But it shows the kind of hold that fossil fuel companies have had on Australian politics for too long,” said Greenpeace Australia Pacific CEO, David Ritter.

“The national interest and the interests of the Australian people are not the same thing as the destructive vested interests of multinational fossil fuel companies.

“The Australian government should be calling for the same standards of propriety and fairness that we would ask of our own public service in Australia. Principles behind conflict of interest rules are well-known and universal and we should be striving to uphold them.

“It’s particularly egregious after having a reputation for going slow in international climate negotiations, that the Australian representatives would stoop to the new level of actively promoting the ongoing participation of vested interests determined to hold up progress,” Mr Ritter said.

A new report by Corporate Accountability International on the role of lobbyists at the UNFCCC, “Inside Job: Big Polluters’ lobbyists on the inside at the UNFCCC” was released in the lead up to the talks last week, on 1 May 2017. The reports examines six of the more than 270 business industry NGOs currently admitted to the climate talks, including the Business Council of Australia: https://www.stopcorporateabuse.org/insidejob

For interviews, contact:

Rachael Vincent, Media Campaigner Greenpeace Australia Pacific
Tel 02 9263 0354 Mob 0413 993 316


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