Press Release
August 13, 2024
Big Oil’s Relentless Lobbying Efforts are Obstructing Climate Progress on Parliament Hill
A new report by Environmental Defence analyzes the 1,255 lobby meetings the fossil fuel industry held with the government in 2023
Montréal/Tiohtià:ke | Traditional, unceded lands of the Kanien’kehá:ka/Mohawk Nation, a gathering place for many First Nations, including the Anishinaabeg – A new report released today by Environmental Defence, Big Oil’s Big Year: A Summary of Big Oil’s 2023 Federal Lobbying, finds that oil and gas companies and industry associations continue to influence climate progress through persistent lobbying. In 2023, they had at least 1,255 lobby meetings with the federal government. The industry predominantly targets its lobbying efforts at the ministries and ministers responsible for climate policy.
“Oil and gas companies continue to delay and weaken the climate policies we urgently need through their relentless lobbying efforts,” says Emilia Belliveau, Energy Transition Program Manager at Environmental Defence. “The lobby meetings we track and insights in this report are really just the tip of the iceberg when it comes to the tactics these companies use to obstruct climate action. Still, it’s important for the public to see how much access the oil and gas industry has to both elected representatives and public service staff.”
The report compiles data from the Federal Registry of Lobbyists. It highlights the most active fossil fuel companies and industry associations, as well as the Members of Parliament, ministries and ministers targeted for lobbying. Some of the key takeaways from the report include:
These figures do not capture the entire extent of the industry’s access, given that the data only includes meetings initiated by the companies that meet the requirements for lobby reporting and not meetings set up by the government.
The report reveals the outsized influence of the Pathways Alliance and its member companies. The Pathways Alliance, the newest oil sands lobbyist consortium, consists of Suncor, Imperial Oil, MEG Energy, Cenovus, Canadian Natural Resources Ltd, and ConocoPhillips. The interests of the Pathways Alliance and its member companies were the most thoroughly represented through lobbying, occupying five spots on the list of the ten most active oil and gas lobbyists. Combining the individual lobbying of Pathways Alliance member companies with the meetings registered by the Alliance, the government had at least 469 registered meetings with this coalition.
“The Pathways Alliance has been readily granted frequent meetings with federal ministries. This is particularly concerning because Pathways has done so much to try and greenwash the oil sands,” says Belliveau. “The Pathways Alliance attempted to rebrand their member companies with massive advertising campaigns that made misleading claims about becoming ‘net-zero’. But these companies’ oil sands extraction operations are some of the largest sources of climate pollution in Canada. Despite this, the oil sands rebrand seems to have succeeded in affording the Pathways Alliance a closer working relationship with the government. The outcome for climate policy in Canada is that regulations have been diluted with loopholes or have been moving at a snail’s pace to the finish line. And we’ve seen the government prioritize and pour taxpayer dollars into the oil industry’s carbon capture pipe-dream instead of cost-effective and readily available climate solutions.”
Given the fossil fuel industry’s history of using political influence to delay and weaken climate policy, Environmental Defence calls on Ministers and MPs to stop accepting meetings with fossil fuel industry lobbyists and increase transparency around their influence on Canada’s climate policies.
Background Information
ABOUT ENVIRONMENTAL DEFENCE (environmentaldefence.ca):
Environmental Defence is a leading Canadian environmental advocacy organization that works with government, industry and individuals to defend clean water, a safe climate and healthy communities.
– 30 –
For more information or to request an interview, please contact:
Midhat Moini, Environmental Defence, media@environmentaldefence.ca
IBF5