By Geoffrey Lean and Amy Anderson

Independent
3 September 2000

BP � the oil giant that is expensively rebranding itself as a green
company � is financing the election campaigns of most of the US congressmen
with the worst environmental records, an investigation by the Independent on
Sunday reveals.

It has contributed money over the past four years to two-thirds of the
senators and members of the House of Representatives who have voted against
every key green measure that has come before them, and failed to help most
of the legislators who have supported them.

The revelation will gravely embarrass the BP chairman, Sir John Browne � who
has become something of a green hero over the past three years � and add
fuel to the flames of a growing controversy about the rebranding exercise,
perhaps the most ambitious ever undertaken by a British company. The new
image will cost the company $100m (�69m) a year, not far short of what it
will be spending on solar power, the most striking of the new initiatives
that it is advertising.

Gone is the shield that the company has used as its symbol since the 1930s.
In its place is the so-called Helios mark, "a vibrant sunburst of green,
white and yellow" named after "the sun god of ancient Greece". But opponents
denounce the new emblem, which will gradually be introduced at the company's
28,000 service stations worldwide over the next four years, as a symbol of
hypocrisy and hype.

Even its critics admit that BP has a far better environmental record than
almost any other big oil company and is now undertaking a range of
pioneering green initiatives. But they point out that it is still increasing
oil exploration and production, and is heavily involved in exploiting two of
the world's most sensitive fields, in the Arctic and in the Atlantic west of
the Shetlands. Greenpeace says that its new slogan, Beyond Petroleum, should
instead be Burning the Planet.

The Independent on Sunday's revelations are being made despite obstruction
from BP, which refused to supply a list of the contributions it makes to US
politicians, although they have to be made public by law. "Why should I want
to do that?" said Yusuf Ibrahim, BP's spokesman in America, when asked to
provide the information early last week. Why indeed? The details, obtained
instead from the Federal Election Commission � and compared with voting
records compiled by the League of Conservation Voters � show that the
company's contributions conflict sharply with its squeaky-green image.

Over the last four years, it contributed to the election campaigns of 22 of
the 36 senators and 37 of the 55 representatives who achieved a zero per
cent rating from the league last year for voting against all the
environmental legislation that it monitored. By contrast, the company has
supported only two of the 38 representatives and two of the 11 senators who
scored a 100 per cent rating by voting in favour of all the measures in
1999.

Further analysis shows that three-quarters of the congressmen whose
campaigns have received the most money from BP over the last four years have
ratings of less than 11 per cent, and that most of them were scored at zero.
Among them are Senator Frank Murkowski, the Chairman of the Senate's Energy
and Natural Resources Committee, who has received $7000 despite having had a
zero per cent record every year since 1994, and Representative Don Young,
Chairman of the House Committee on Resources, who has had over $11,000,
though he has scored less than 10 per cent in every year over the same
period. Both Congressmen are from Alaska and are pressing for legislation to
open up the state's protected Arctic National Wildlife Refuge � known as
America's Serengeti for the richness of its wildlife � to drilling by oil
companies, including BP. The company has contributed similar sums to Senator
Trent Lott, the republican leader in the Senate, and Senator Don Nickles,
the chairman of its Energy Research, Development, Production and Regulation
Subcommittee. Lott has zero scores for six consecutive years and Nickles for
three, and both voted for opening up the wildlife refuge.

Analysis of voting on other specific issues reveals a similar pattern: BP
has contributed to the campaigns of 33 of the senators who voted against
increasing funding for renewable energy, and only 11 of those who voted for
it; it has helped 34 of those who blocked reforms to the way oil companies
receive royalties, and only nine of those who supported the
environmentalists' position.

Perhaps most strikingly, the company has helped to finance the campaigns of
34 of the 65 senators who successfully introduced a motion in 1997 to reject
any international agree- ment to combat global warming, though Sir John
Browne and BP have led industry attempts to persuade politicians to tackle
the the problem.

BP's spokesman in America refused even to hear the results of the
Independent on Sunday's investigation. "I have nothing to say about that,"
Mr Ibrahim interjected. "We are financing according to American law and we
are happy with what we are doing."

The revelations � and BP's response to them � will undermine the rebranding
exercise and genuine green initiatives that are being taken by the company.
Last month Sir John announced that BP would double its investment in solar
power to $500m over the next three years and aimed to make this a $1bn
business by 2007. It already has almost 20 per cent of the global market.

It is fitting 200 of its service stations with solar panels and will equip
all its new ones with them. It has promised to cut its own emissions of the
pollution that causes global warming by 10 per cent by 2010 and aims to sell
cleaner petrol in more than 40 cities around the world by the end of this
year.

Three years ago Sir John accepted the dangers of global warming and made his
company the first to break ranks with the oil industry's united front
against cuts in emissions of carbon dioxide from the burning of fossil
fuels. In April he joined leading environmentalists in giving one of this
year's Reith lectures. "The enlightened company," he said, "increasingly
recognises that there are good commercial reasons for being ahead of the
pack when it comes to issues to do with the environment."

But Greenpeace points out that Sir John also announced that he expected BP's
oil production to increase by 4 to 5 per cent per year, and gas production
by twice as much. And capital expenditure on fossil fuel exploration and
production will rise to $8bn a year, double what was spent in 1999.

BP is the only company taking oil from one of the world's most controversial
areas, the Atlantic Frontier, 100 miles west of the Shetlands. It is also
planning to become the first company to extract oil in the even more
sensitive Arctic Ocean, off the northern coast of Alaska, as well as backing
efforts to open the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge.

Rob Gueterbock, Greenpeace's climate and energy campaigner, says: "BP's
rebranding is a triumph of style over substance. At best it is misleading
its shareholders and customers; at worst it is engaged in blatant
hypocrisy."

BP responds: "The world still wants petroleum and we still aim to provide
it. But we are looking at the future, to a world that wants cleaner fuels
and solar power. 'Beyond Petroleum' describes not where we are now but where
we are looking to be."


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