Kemi Badenoch Made Anti-Net Zero Speech at Shell Ad Agency

The Tory leader was hosted by a firm that holds a major contract with one of the worldโ€™s biggest polluters.
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Conservative Party leader Kemi Badenoch speaking at the advertising agency Havas in London. Credit: Credit: Conservative Party / Flickr (CC BY-NC-ND 2.0)

Conservative leader Kemi Badenoch today ditched her partyโ€™s commitment to the UKโ€™s flagship climate target in a speech hosted by an advertising group that works for Shell, DeSmog can reveal.

During her address, Badenoch suggested that we are โ€œbankrupting ourselvesโ€ in the pursuit of reaching net zero emissions by 2050. She said that the country should still seek to reduce its climate impact, but shouldnโ€™t set a date for achieving net zero.

Badenoch said that Britain has โ€œthe highest electricity bills in the developed worldโ€ โ€“ which is caused by expensive gas prices rather than the cost of renewables โ€“ and claimed that the UK is โ€œonly responsible for 1 percent of global emissionsโ€. In reality, taking into account its colonial history, the UK is responsible for more than five times this figure.

The Tory leader, who has received recent donations from fossil fuel interests and climate science deniers, made her speech at the Havas Village in Kingโ€™s Cross, London, and was introduced by H/Advisors CEO Neil Bennett.

H/Advisors is owned by Havas โ€“ one of the worldโ€™s largest public relations and advertising agencies, based in France. Bennett said he was โ€œdelightedโ€ to welcome Badenoch to the Havas campus for her speech, to ensure the company stays โ€œat the heart of public debateโ€.

In September 2023, news broke that Havas had won a major Shell advertising contract โ€“ a move condemned by climate campaigners.

Shell is still committed to exploring for new sources of oil and gas and does not have any plans to reduce the overall amount it produces by 2030. In 2021, the District Court of the Hague found that the total CO2 emissions of the Shell group exceeded the emissions of many states, including the Netherlands.

In August, the UKโ€™s Advertising Standards Authority watchdog began reviewingShell campaign produced by Havas that ran on UK television in the first half of the year. The campaign had prompted complaints that it painted a misleading picture of the Shellโ€™s role in the energy transition.

In October 2023, Havas CEO Yannick Bollorรฉ told Campaign that he had been happy to pitch for the Shell account, saying โ€œwe believe the most effective change comes from within.โ€ 

โ€œWe wonโ€™t participate in any greenwashing whatsoever and we will accompany [Shell] and help achieve their transition,โ€ Bollorรฉ said.

In July 2024, four Havas agencies were stripped of their โ€œB Corpโ€ status for high environmental, ethical, and governance standards following complaints raised over the companyโ€™s Shell contract.

H/Advisors bid for Shellโ€™s global public relations account last year, although the work eventually remained in the hands of Edelman.

Havas has worked with a number of fossil fuel clients in recent years, although the company had seemed on track to reduce its involvement with polluters, prior to the 2023 Shell contract.

The firm has worked in various capacities for BP, Kuwait Petroleum International, and TotalEnergies since 2019, while Imperial Oil and Gas was a H/Advisors client in 2023. 

โ€œLetโ€™s not forget that it was the Tories that legally enshrined the 2050 net zero target,โ€ said Agustina Olivieri, Good Law Project head of digital communications, โ€œbut they never acted on this seriously โ€“ as Good Law Project helped to expose in successive High Court battles.

โ€œAnd now with a nihilist in the White House and fossil fuel funding filling their coffers as their impetus, Badenochโ€™s party have spinelessly decided to drop it altogether.โ€

H/Advisors, Havas, and Shell were approached for comment.

Badenochโ€™s Climate Denial Ties

While serving in the last Conservative government, Badenoch described the 2050 net zero emissions target as โ€œcrucialโ€. However, her support for the policy has waned in more recent times.

The Tory premier, who was elected to the role in November, received funding and office space during her leadership campaign from Neil Record, chair of Net Zero Watch, the campaign arm of the Global Warming Policy Foundation (GWPF) โ€“ the UKโ€™s foremost climate science denial group.

Record โ€“ who is also lifetime president of the Institute of Economic Affairs (IEA), a think tank that received funding from BP every year from 1967 to at least 2018 โ€“ in July wrote that achieving net zero by 2050 โ€œwill restrict our freedom, and is likely to be eye-wateringly expensiveโ€. Record has donated to both the IEA and GWPF.

Over the past two decades, the Conservative Party has accepted ยฃ7.2 million from senior figures at the GWPF.

Badenoch also received ยฃ10,000 during her leadership campaign from House of Lords member Dambisa Moyo, who is a director at the fossil fuel giant Chevron.

A press release from the GWPF celebrated Badenochโ€™s statement today, saying that it could have been drafted by the groupโ€™s late founder Nigel Lawson โ€œalmost verbatimโ€.

Green groups were not so enthusiastic. โ€œToday marks a dark day in the history of the Conservative Party,โ€ said Ed Matthew, director of the UK programme for climate change think tank E3G. โ€œBy abandoning net zero by 2050, Badenoch has sold out the interests of the British people to the fossil fuel industry.

โ€œThis is an act of political cowardice and it will not fool the British people or British business, who strongly support ambition climate action. The price will be electoral oblivion.โ€

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Sam is DeSmogโ€™s UK Deputy Editor. He was previously the Investigations Editor of Byline Times and an investigative journalist at the BBC. He is the author of two books: Fortress London, and Bullingdon Club Britain.

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