REPORT: Taxing Big Oil would grow UN climate loss & damage fund twentyfold, analysis finds
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  • Press Release

REPORT: Taxing Big Oil would grow UN climate loss & damage fund twentyfold, analysis finds

A press conference about this report will be held at COP29 on 18 Nov 2024, 16:00 – 16:30 Baku time at the Press Conference Room Natavan, Blue Zone. For more information or to receive a copy of the report, please email joe.evans@greenpeace.org

Baku, Azerbaijan, 18 November 2024 – A small tax on just seven of the world’s biggest oil and gas companies could grow the UN Fund for Responding to Loss and Damage by more than 2000% and help address the costs of extreme weather events, according to new analysis published today by Greenpeace International and Stamp Out Poverty. The organisations are calling for a long term global tax on fossil fuel extraction, with year-on-year increases, combined with taxes on excess profits and other levies.[1][2] 

A ‘Climate Damages Tax’ would put a cost on every tonne of carbon emitted by the coal, oil and gas extracted – starting at $5 per tonne and rising each year thereafter. If it was imposed on ExxonMobil, Shell, Chevron, TotalEnergies, BP, Equinor and ENI it could raise $15 billion in the first year alone to help the world’s most climate-vulnerable countries pay for the escalating cost of damage caused by climate change. [3] Currently, just $702 million has been pledged to the loss and damage fund, while the combined profits of those fossil fuel companies exceeds $148 billion.

Earlier this month, Barbados Prime Minister Mia Mottley, French President Emmanuel Macron and Kenyan President William Ruto stated their support for a Climate Damages Tax.

The briefing also highlights the financial costs of some of this year’s worst weather events that have been attributed to climate change, totalling over $64bn. These include Hurricane Beryl, Hurricane Helene, the heatwave in India in May, Typhoon Carina/Gaemi, the floods in Brazil in May, and the floods in Kenya and Tanzania in April.[4] The costs of damage from the disasters surveyed range from US$2.9bn (Typhoon Carina) to US$ 25bn (heatwaves in India), and present just a fraction of the total cost of loss and damage globally over the last year. 

A Climate Damages Tax imposed only on wealthy OECD countries could play an essential role in helping the poorest and most vulnerable to rebuild after climate-related disasters. Increasing annually by US$5 per tonne of CO2-equivalent based on the volumes of oil and gas extracted, the tax could raise an estimated US$900 billion by 2030 to support governments and communities around the world as they face growing climate impacts.[5] 

“While oil and gas giants keep raking in grotesque levels of profit from exploiting resources, the damages resulting from the industry’s operations are disproportionately borne by people who did not cause the crisis,” said David Hillman, Director of Stamp Out Poverty. “A climate damages tax – along with other levies on fossil fuels and high-emitting sectors – will make polluters pay for the cost of climate impacts, as well as supporting workers and affected communities in the transition to clean energy, jobs, and transport.”

“Who should pay? This is fundamentally an issue of climate justice and it is time to shift the financial burden for the climate crisis from its victims to the polluters behind it,” said Abdoulaye Diallo, Co-Head of Greenpeace International’s Stop Drilling Start Paying campaign. “Our analysis lays bare the scale of the challenge posed by climate loss and damage and the urgent need for innovative solutions to raise the funds to meet it. We reject Big Oil’s assault on people and democracy and call on governments worldwide to adopt the Climate Damages Tax and other mechanisms to extract revenue from the oil and gas industry.” 

– ENDS –

Notes:

[1] The Loss and Damage Fund was announced at COP27 in Egypt to help developing countries pay for impacts of natural disasters caused by climate change. Recently renamed the Fund for Responding to Loss and Damage (FRLD), it currently has US$702 million in pledged funds. According to Greenpeace International and Stamp Out Poverty’s calculations, a Climate Damages Tax levied on seven major international oil and gas companies would add in the first year alone US$15.02 billion, corresponding to over 21 times what is currently pledged to the fund. 

[2] “Paying the price: The economic impacts of seven extreme weather events in 2024 make the case for why climate polluters should pay”.

[3] The estimated Climate Damages Tax payable by the seven largest oil and gas companies based on 2023 emissions data is as follows:

Oil & gas company2023 adjusted earnings(in US$ billions)Total estimated 2023 Scope 1-3 emissions (Mt CO2e)Estimated Climate Damages Tax payable on 2023 emissions at US$5 per tonne CO2(in US$ billions)
ExxonMobil38.6 637.573.19 
Shell28.3 460.172.30 
Chevron24.7 507.242.54 
TotalEnergies 23.2 411.922.06 
BP13.8 375.301.88 
Equinor 10.4 343.311.72 
ENI9.2 267.74 1.34 
Totals148.20 3,003.2415.02 

[4] Hurricane Helene – WWA; Typhoon Gaemi – WWA; Brazil floods – WWA; India’s heatwave – WWA; Kenya floods – WWA; Hurricane Beryl – Climate Central.


[5] A Climate Damages Tax is a fossil fuel extraction charge applied to the carbon dioxide equivalent (CO2-equivalent) emissions of each tonne of coal, barrel of oil or cubic metre of gas produced. The proposal, supported by over 100 environmental NGOs, advocates taxing – at an annually increasing rate – fossil fuel giants that have been central to driving the climate crisis, including ExxonMobil, Shell, TotalEnergies, BP, Chevron, Equinor, and Eni, whose 2023 earnings totalled US$148.2 billion. 

[6] S. Sharma and D. Hillman, The Climate Damages Tax: A guide to what it is and how it works, Stamp Out Poverty, 2024, p. 7. 

Contacts:

Tal Harris, Greenpeace International, Global Media Lead – Stop Drilling Start Paying campaign, +41-782530550, tharris@greenpeace.org

Joe Evans, Greenpeace UK, Press & Comms Officer, joe.evans@greenpeace.org / +44 7890 595387 

Greenpeace International Press Desk, +31 (0) 20 718 2470 (available 24 hours), pressdesk.int@greenpeace.orgFollow @greenpeacepress on X/Twitter for our latest international press releases