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HomeSci-TechMention of ‘fossil fuels’ cut from videos at UN climate talks

Mention of ‘fossil fuels’ cut from videos at UN climate talks

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Videos produced by environmental groups to be shown to thousands of participants in a major UN climate summit were banned by organisers for mentioning fossil fuels, in a move campaigners say amounts to censorship.

 

AFP has obtained emails sent by the United Nations to NGOs asking them to remove frames referring to “dirty energy” and “pipelines”, claiming that they breached the UN climate convention’s rules of participation.

 

The COP24 climate talks, which wrap up Friday in Poland, bring together more than 20,000 officials, ministers, activists and business representatives from across the world.

 

Among those accredited to observe the process are a host of pressure groups whose goals vary enormously.

 

Green campaigners complain that so-called “business-interest NGOs” — known as BINGOs — representing big energy firms are allowed to participate with very little oversight.

 

They allege these groups use their industry connections to influence national negotiators in the process of hammering out a global plan to limit temperature rises and avert runaway planetary warming.

 

Environmental NGOs prepared a series of short films that were destined to be shown on large screens near the entrance to the sprawling COP24 complex in the Polish mining city of Katowice.

 

But after submitting the films for what they thought would be a pro-forma review, the UN objected to several frames mentioning fossil fuel-related activity.

 

In one email the UN liaison body asked for a shot containing the words “dirty energy” to be removed.

 

It also asked that the phrases “prohibit participation of fossil fuel corporations” and “why are politicians still approving pipelines, coal plants and fracking” be cut.

 

The climate convention prohibits “activity derisory to the UN, any of their member states, organisations or any individual or criticism that would go against basic rules of decorum”.

 

But campaigners say their videos did not contravene these guidelines, as no specific country or company was named.

 

“The videos are otherwise of excellent quality and it would be a shame to exclude these high-quality videos on the basis of one or two short frames,” the UN emailed.

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