The CEO of TotalEnergies informed shareholders that new oilfields must be developed to meet global demand. Climate activists protested outside the annual meetings of the French energy company and its significant shareholder, Amundi, a global investment manager.
Police detained 173 individuals out of the hundreds who assembled outside Amundi’s Paris headquarters.
Hours before the TotalEnergies annual general meeting commenced, climate activists, including members of Greenpeace, congregated. They unveiled a large “Wanted” banner targeting the company’s CEO, Patrick Pouyanné, labeling him “the leader of France’s most polluting company.”
Law enforcement promptly removed the banner. Additionally, hundreds of Extinction Rebellion activists assembled outside Amundi’s general meeting.
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Pouyanne told shareholders that higher oil prices prompted by insufficient fossil fuel output “would quickly become unbearable for the populations in emerging countries, but also in our developed countries”.
During Friday’s meeting, almost 80% of shareholders endorsed the company’s climate strategy, while over 75% voted to extend Pouyanne’s tenure as CEO for another three years.
Pouyanné, who recently proposed a potential listing of the company in New York, assured shareholders that TotalEnergies had no intention of departing from France.