Almost 500 carbon capture lobbyists granted access to COP29 climate summit

Almost 500 carbon capture lobbyists granted access to COP29 climate summit

At least 480 lobbyists working on carbon capture and storage (CCS) have been granted access to the UN climate summit.

CCS lobbyists at COP29 in Baku, Azerbaijan, outnumber the core national delegations from powerful nations including the US and Canada. Nearly half of the lobbyists were granted access as members of national delegations, affording them greater access to negotiations, including 55 who were invited as “guests” by the Azerbaijani government, which is hosting this year’s climate summit, and given what some at the conference are calling “red-carpet treatment.”

Activists have long derided the technology, noting it does not yet exist at scale and doesn’t the local harms of fossil fuel extraction, and that it can be dangerous. And despite its branding as a climate solution, it has so far mostly been used to recover carbon from oil wells and then inject it back underground to help squeeze more fuel from depleted fields – a process known as enhanced oil recovery.