15 Aug 2002
Leading Republican Party and conservative lobbyists - many funded by Exxon Mobil -
have combined to try to stop progress at the Johannesburg Earth Summit. Environment
pressure group Friends of the Earth today published a letter to President George
W Bush from 31 political groups and individuals, demanding that he not attend
the Summit and calling on him to ensure that his negotiators prevent any
progress on climate change .
The letter, dated August 2nd, says "we applaud your decision
not to attend the Summit in person . Even more than the Earth
Summit in Rio in 1992, the Johannesburg Summit will provide a global
media stage for many of the most irresponsible and destructive elements
involved in critical international economic and environmental issues.
Your presence would only help to publicize and make more credible
various anti-freedom, anti-people, anti-globalization, and anti-Western
agendas."
It also claims that "the least important global environmental
issue is potential global warming and we hope that your negotiators
at Johannesburg can keep it off the table and out of the spotlight."
And the letter also says that "in our view the worst possible
outcome at Johannesburg would be taking any steps towards creating a
World Environmental Organization, as the European
Union has suggested".
Signatories include:
(all funding details from www2.exxonmobil.com/files/corporate/public_policy1.pdf,
an official Exxon document)
Many of these groups have long been active in trying to frustrate progress
on tackling man-made climate change and other global environmental crises.
For example, the CFACT sent fifty "trained" Republican students to the
Bonn climate talks in 2001 to demonstrate against the Kyoto Treaty.
The AERF promotes and supports the work of leading US climate sceptic
S Fred Singer.
Friends of the Earth Director Designate Tony Juniper commented:
"This letter casts a grim light on the iron triangle of the Bush
White House, corporate polluters such as Exxon Mobil, and conservative lobbyists.
They are determined to block any progress at the Johannesburg Summit. They have
already leaned on President Bush not even to show up, and are now
demanding that his negotiators do their best to wreck any hope of agreement.
These lobbyists cannot live off the support of ordinary citizens - who would
react with incredulity or anger to their claims that climate change is an
issue of no importance..
So they rely instead on handouts from corporations such as Exxon. Exxon doesn't
have the courage to promote its political agenda directly. So it relies on
the lobbyists to do its dirty work.
The case for a binding international agreement to control the behaviour of destructive corporations has never looked stronger."
Contact details:
Friends of the Earth
26-28 Underwood St.
LONDON
N1 7JQ
Tel: 020 7490 1555
Fax: 020 7490 0881
Web: www.foe.co.uk/feedback.html
Media team