01/11/2019

Business Lobby Groups Accused Of 'Undermining' Climate Change Policy

ABC NewsAndrew Robertson

BP, Shell and Caltex are among the heavy polluters sitting on the BCA's climate change committee. (AP: Alik Keplicz)
Macquarie Group co-founder, and now chairman of Alinta Energy, Mark Johnson is a pillar of the establishment.
So it's surprising to hear he's no fan of business lobby groups like the Business Council of Australia (BCA) or the Minerals Council of Australia, which also see themselves as part of the establishment.
Both are under pressure over their stance on climate change.
"I suspect that it may be more analogous to our political situation where a relatively small rump of non-believers, conspiracy theorists and others have exerted influence to stop more proactive policies," Mr Johnson told the ABC.
"You often want to stay outside associations or industry bodies which have a tendency to come up with a slightly lower common denominator answer."
Mark Johnson says conspiracy theorists are exerting their influence to frustrate climate change initiatives. (ABC News: John Gunn)
And on climate change, there are many who believe that's exactly what business lobby groups are doing.
The latest to speak out are big global investors with $16 trillion in shareholdings, who have put their name to a letter demanding action.
"Investors have clear expectations of companies in impacted sectors and they're looking to work with them to get real positive progress in order to protect shareholder value," said Emma Herd, the CEO of Investor Group on Climate Change (IGCC), whose members are also signatories to that letter.
One of the key demands is for their companies to withdraw from organisations that are not pulling their weight.
"Investors expect companies to ensure that they are aligned with the Paris Agreement and that company resources are not used to support trade associations that act for short-term gain, undermining Paris Agreement objectives," the IGCC letter said.
Front and centre is the coal lobby; groups like the Minerals Council of Australia, Coal 21 and the New South Wales Minerals Council, which the big institutions say, "continue to undermine effective climate policy".
"I think there's a lot of scope for Australia's industry associations to be working better with their members, in terms of managing for what we know will be very real financial implications arising from climate change," Ms Herd said.

Vested interests
The Business Council is under fire for supporting Kyoto carry-over credits to meet Australia's emissions reduction target for the more recent Paris Agreement.
That's despite the BCA saying it supports Paris.

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"In carbon accounting terms, that means that these organisations, and now the Federal Government, are planning for Australia to emit an additional 370 million tonnes of carbon, or CO2 equivalent, by 2030," Brynn O'Brien, head of shareholder activist group The Australasian Centre for Corporate Responsibility (ACCR), said.
According to the BCA's website, its policy on climate change comes from its Energy and Climate Change Committee.
A committee where the majority of member companies are heavy emitters of carbon.
It includes big names like Origin Energy, Orica, Santos, BP, Ausgrid, Chevron, BHP, Caltex, Shell and ExxonMobil.
"When you do have that key policy committee dominated by some of the companies that stand to benefit from delay to our de-carbonisation and our transition in Australia, that's how you end up with policy that is not representative of the broader membership," Ms O'Brien said.
Under pressure from shareholders, Westpac, Telstra and BHP are among those reviewing their memberships of the Business Council.
BHP is also reviewing its membership of the Minerals Council, having already quit the world Coal Association.
"Many coal producers I think are quite realistic about the outlook for their commodity, they know that's it's going to decline," Mr Johnson said.
"But they've got positions to preserve at the moment so they will work quite vociferously to preserve those positions."

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Other lobby groups are also in the firing line.
London-based shareholder activist group Influence Map has rated the world's worst on climate change.
Four Australian organisations make the top 30, with the Minerals Council at number eight.
The Australian Petroleum Production and Exploration Association (APPEA) is ranked 18th, while the Business Council is 20th and the Australian Industry Group is in 30th place.
The top six lobby groups — in terms of resistance to climate change — are all from the United States, according to Influence Map.
It has some harsh words for the Minerals Council though, slamming it as "highly climate-oppositional" and having a "significant impact in undermining climate action".
As shareholder activists toughen their approach to lobby groups, the upcoming annual general meetings of BHP, ANZ and NAB will vote on resolutions calling for those companies to pull out of the Business Council.
And as pressure has built on the Business Council, just to add to its woes, six big companies have cancelled their memberships — AMP, Santos, JB Hi Fi, QBE, Medibank Private and IAG.

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