Corporate split personalities
Phil Mattera for the Dirt Diggers Digest
The new issue of Corporate Knights, a magazine which usually focuses on celebrating environmental initiatives in the business word, has a cover story with a different angle.
Headlined “The Climate Blockers,” the piece highlights major
companies with split personalities: They talk a good game when it comes to
matters such as sustainability while directly and indirectly promoting policies
that impede decarbonization.
Among
the corporations deemed to be most guilty of this hypocrisy are U.S. petroleum
giants Chevron, ExxonMobil and ConocoPhillips and U.S. utilities Sempra Energy,
American Electric and Southern Company. Others on the ten-worst list are BASF,
Nippon Steel, Gazprom and Toyota.
This
assessment is based on the work of InfluenceMap,
a UK-based non-profit which seeks to hold large corporations accountable for
their climate practices. Its Climate Policy Footprint report identifies
the “most negative and influential” companies globally, based on lobbying and
other influence activities—whether carried out by the corporation itself or by
its trade associations.
InfluenceMap also identifies the trade associations with the worst track record on climate policy. The biggest culprits are said to be the American Petroleum Institute, American Fuel & Petrochemical Manufacturers, the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, and BusinessEurope.
Some
of the companies on the ten-worst list are not only members of these
associations but also part of their leadership. Chevron CEO Mike Wirth is also
the chairman of the American Petroleum Institute. Chevron and ExxonMobil have
representatives on the board of American Fuel & Petrochemical
Manufacturers. Chevron, ConocoPhillips and Sempra have representatives on the
board of the U.S. Chamber.
InfluenceMap
provides a vital service at a time when growing numbers of large companies are
professing adherence to ESG principles—especially the environmental
component—while quietly working to discourage legislators and policymakers from
moving ahead on aggressive climate initiatives.
Strangely,
it is also a time when rightwing public officials in the U.S. are trying to gin
up public opposition to what are being labeled “woke corporations.” This effort
exaggerates the significance of ESG in the business world and ignores the
divergence between sustainability p.r. and regressive influence efforts.
There
are actually two types of environmental hypocrisy rampant in Corporate America.
Not only are purportedly enlightened companies pushing bad policies—they are
failing to comply with existing environmental safeguards. This includes not
only climate practices, which are not heavily regulated, but also conventional
pollution.
This is part of what we document in Violation Tracker. Take, for example, the companies in the InfluenceMap ten-worst. Over the past two decades, Chevron has racked up over $1 billion in fines and settlements. These include a fine of more than $1 million in red Texas last year.
ExxonMobil’s total since 2000 is more than $2 billion,
including a $9.5 million settlement
last year with New Jersey over PCB contamination. They are surpassed by
American Electric Power, whose penalty total is nearly $5 billion.
No
company that repeatedly breaks environmental laws—nor any company that uses its
influence to block or slow down climate-friendly initiatives—should be able to
depict itself as an environmental white knight.