Brussels, Dec 2 2010 | Friends of the Earth Europe et.al. RWE (npower), Goldman Sachs and derivatives
lobby group ISDA have been given the dubious honour of being named the Worst EU
Lobbyists of 2010. The results of the dual climate and finance categories of
the Worst EU Lobbying Awards 2010 [1] were revealed today during a ceremony
outside the ISDA office in Brussels.
Citizens across Europe
participated in an online public vote for the most deserving of the climate and
finance nominees. Voters sent a clear message to EU transparency and ethics
Commissioner Maroš Šefcovic that a major clean-up of the Brussels lobbying scene is urgently needed,
and it's time the European Commission put public interest above the commercial
interests of large companies [2].
In the climate category [3],
German energy giant RWE's subsidiary npower, nominated for claiming to be green
while lobbying to keep its dirty coal- and oil-fired power plants open, won
with 58% of the total vote. BusinessEurope, nominated for its aggressive
lobbying to block effective climate action in the EU while claiming to support
action to protect the climate, took second place with 24% of the total votes
and Arcelor-Mittal, the steel Industry "fat cat", came in third with 18% of the
total votes.
Nina Katzemich, speaking for the
organisers of the 2010 Worst EU Lobbying Awards, said: "These awards show
that people around Europe are fed up with
deceptive lobbying practices used by big business when it comes to climate
regulation. RWE claims to be green but has pulled out all the stops to keep its
dirty power plants open, promoting their profits over public interests. If the
European Commission is serious about tackling climate change, it must stop
listening one-sidedly to corporations. It can make a new
start - now, in Cancun."
In the finance category [4],
Goldman Sachs and derivatives lobby group ISDA, nominated for aggressive
lobbying to defend their ‘financial weapons of mass destruction', took first
place with 59% of the total vote. Royal Bank of Scotland
(23%) took second, nominated for secretly lobbying in Brussels and for exploiting insider contacts.
Hedge funds and private equity lobby groups AIMA and EVCA (18%) took third, nominated
for deceptive lobbying to block regulation of damaging speculation in the financial
sector.
Paul de Clerck, speaking for the
organisers of the 2010 Worst EU Lobbying Awards, said: "Despite the
unprecedented crisis following the financial meltdown, intense lobbying by
large banks and investment firms continues to delay and seriously water-down
much-needed regulatory reforms. While people around the world are suffering
severe consequences, corporate lobbyists are blocking any measure that could limit
the massive profits of banks. This is unacceptable. We call on the
European Commission to put an end
to the privileged access granted to big business, for instance limiting their
access to EU advisory groups on future financial regulation."
The awards are part of an ongoing
campaign to expose and counter dirty lobbying tactics and privileged access
impacting on EU decision-making. For more information about this year's
nominees, and to follow future developments, please visit: www.worstlobby.eu
Notes to the editor:
[1] The Worst EU Lobbying Awards
2010 are organised by Friends of the Earth Europe, Corporate Europe Observatory,
LobbyControl, Spinwatch. For more information about the organisers, and the
partnering organisations: http://www.worstlobby.eu/2010/about
[2] Almost 8,000 voters sent the
message to Commissioner Maroš Šefcovic: "The firms and lobby groups nominated
for the Worst EU Lobbying Awards 2010 have been able to undermine EU policies
for combating climate change and regulating the financial sector. We urge you
to take the necessary steps to ensure that the European Commission puts the
public interest above the commercial interests of large companies."
[3] The Climate category is
supported by: Climate Action Network-Europe, Oxfam, World Development Movement.
[4] The Finance category is
supported by: ATTAC, World Development Movement.