British Academics Stand with Saudi Arabia at International Climate Talks to Present Green Front

picture-25876-1571179299.jpg
onNov 12, 2016 @ 08:20 PST

Saudi Arabia and members of the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) are generally an obstructive force at the annual international climate change talks. But that rarely stops them trying to present a green front to theย world.

Today, two British academics stood alongside representatives of state-owned oil company Saudi Aramco and chemical giant SABIC to help present a picture of low carbonย progress.

The panel took place among the lavish surroundings of the GCC pavilion, filled with bright screens showing stock footage of the regionโ€™s low carbon projects and well-dressed hostesses handing out carefully curated informationย sheets.

Jon Price and Professor Anthony Ryan from the University of Sheffield outlined how technological advances developed in the UK could help to clean up the Gulf regionโ€™s manufacturingย processes.

While the presentations highlighted some intriguing research, the image of two figures from a leading publicly-funded British university contributing to the GCCโ€™s public relations push perhaps raises someย questions.

When asked if he considered lending the universityโ€™s reputation to the conferenceโ€™s traditional nemeses was problematic, Priceย reasoned:

โ€œBy having manufacturing rather than oil, thatโ€™s a better thing. And helping them to grow food in Africa, is a good thing โ€ฆThatโ€™s what weโ€™re trying to doย here.โ€

โ€œSo what do you do? Do you sit aside and watch, or do you try and help them do good things? ย Thatโ€™s the balance, thatโ€™s ourย agenda.โ€

It is true that selling the UKโ€™s knowledge about clean and efficient manufacturing processes could help to slightly reduce the carbon intensity of the GCC countriesโ€™ย economies.

But there are perhaps better settings for that collaboration than a public event at the worldโ€™s most prominent climate change conference, with plenty of photographers capturing the moment for the worldโ€™s leading oilย states.

Main image credit: DeSmog UK CCBY

Get Weekly News Updates

picture-25876-1571179299.jpg
Mat was DeSmog's Special Projects and Investigations Editor, and Operations Director of DeSmog UK Ltd. He was DeSmog UKโ€™s Editor from October 2017 to March 2021, having previously been an editor at Nature Climate Change and analyst at Carbon Brief.

Related Posts

Analysis
onNov 21, 2025 @ 16:13 PST

Corporate pledges to fight deforestation by turning degraded pasture into cropland seen boosting demand for harmful chemical inputs.

Corporate pledges to fight deforestation by turning degraded pasture into cropland seen boosting demand for harmful chemical inputs.

As the New York-based firm was preparing to work on the climate summit, it was also pushing for Brazilian oil and gas distributor Vibra Energia to help power it.

As the New York-based firm was preparing to work on the climate summit, it was also pushing for Brazilian oil and gas distributor Vibra Energia to help power it.
onNov 20, 2025 @ 16:02 PST

Trade groups lobbied ministers to promote a source of energy linked to massive environmental harms at the U.N. climate conference.

Trade groups lobbied ministers to promote a source of energy linked to massive environmental harms at the U.N. climate conference.
Analysis

Agribusiness companies generate huge quantities of greenhouse gas pollution โ€” and PR companies help them obscure it.

Agribusiness companies generate huge quantities of greenhouse gas pollution โ€” and PR companies help them obscure it.