Insurance Giant Marsh Signs on for Environmentally Disastrous Pipeline Project
Four months after starting work at Marsh McLennan, a young woman stood up in a ballroom where hundreds of employees had gathered for an away day and asked what the company was going to do about its fossil fuel work. "There was a smattering of applause," she recalls with a laugh, but no real answer.
It was her first job out of university and Rachel* was keen to use her position within one of the world's largest professional services firms to make a difference: "If decisions made by big companies could somehow be changed to better prioritise environmental issues, that's how I can see impact happening at scale."
Last year, Rachel and a number of her colleagues ratcheted up the pressure on their bosses. The Bureau can reveal that more than 100 Marsh McLennan employees signed a letter urging the company not to broker insurance for an oil pipeline project in east
The episode shines a light on the activism happening inside major companies, where younger, environmentally conscious employees are coming up against industry veterans resistant to the prospect of changing established business practices.
At Marsh McLennan, their pleas fell on deaf ears. Marsh, the conglomerate's insurance broker - and the world's biggest - bid for and won the contract to find insurers for the east African crude oil pipeline (EACOP), a huge and environmentally ruinous project expected to generate more than 33 million tons of carbon emissions each year. As well as threatening to derail vital targets set out in the Paris Agreement, the pipeline's construction will likely uproot thousands of villagers in
The pipeline - backed by the French oil giant TotalEnergies and the
"Climate change is with us," said
Like the Adani coal mine in
Marsh, which has previously pledged to support efforts to contain the climate crisis, is now recruiting insurers who are themselves coming under pressure to rule out working on the pipeline. A growing list of insurers and banks, including
At 1,400km long, the pipeline will slice through the habitats of elephants, giraffes and chimpanzees, and threatens to pollute
It is estimated that more than 12,000 households across
Employee activism
In their letter to management, the Marsh McLennan employees wrote: "Insurers and insurance brokers essentially decide which types of projects can be built and operated - thus serving as risk managers for society as a whole. We believe that EACOP poses an unacceptable risk."
Rachel believes that is not enough. "We can't say that we're a sustainable company if we recycle our office paper but we facilitate insurance for fossil fuel projects that harm frontline communities and worsen the climate crisis," she said. "We need to take an honest look at the real-world impacts of the work that we do every day at our desks."
A spokesperson for
"We believe all communities are best served by working with operators of clean energy assets to accelerate progress to a lower carbon world and with traditional energy clients to enable them to manage the risks associated with current projects and make the transition as quickly and responsibly as possible."
They added that
Insurance companies and brokers have fiercely guarded the secrecy of their involvement in contentious projects - even internally - to avoid scrutiny from campaigners, investors and their own employees. Last year, the operator of a tar sands pipeline in
Rachel said: "I would sincerely question any set of client engagement principles that would allow EACOP through as a project that upholds sustainable development goals."
There are also concerns over EACOP's potential implications for human rights and democracy in
Janepher Baitwamasa, human rights advocate at Navigators of
In the view of
ASF is calling for TotalEnergies to use its influence to help prevent these abuses. Ravet said: "They have tremendous leverage. They can be extremely clear that this cannot be done."
A spokesperson for TotalEnergies told the Bureau it had developed a plan that "identifies the risks relating to human rights and local communities [...] as well as the risks to human safety and the environment". The company said operational emissions from its oil projects in
CNOOC referred enquiries to TotalEnergies and declined to comment further.
TotalEnergies and CNOOC will receive a larger share of the profits when oil prices are low, in effect passing some of the financial risks of the global energy transition to the Ugandan government, according to a report. TotalEnergies said EACOP would "create significant in country value for both
"That is just rhetoric to guilt the western world into accepting the project," said Diana Nabiruma from the
Rachel, who has now left
*
NEDHSA releases Health Insurance, Demographics, and Clinic Activities Report
Permanent Life Insurance Market to Witness Huge Growth by 2028 : AIG, Aviva, AIA: Permanent Life Insurance Market 2022
Advisor News
Annuity News
Health/Employee Benefits News
Life Insurance News