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Extinction rebellion briefly occupies BNP Paribas' entrance during TotalEnergies protest

Extinction rebellion briefly occupies BNP Paribas' entrance during TotalEnergies protest

Around a dozen climate activists from Extinction Rebellion briefly occupied the lobby entrance of the French bank BNP Paribas in Paris, Friday morning. They were protesting what they claimed to be BNP's ties with energy group TotalEnergies which held its annual shareholders' meeting on Friday afternoon.

Some protesters wearing white masks shouted slogans briefly and threw fake money around before the police forced them out.

Extinction Rebellion stated in a press release that the action was part a campaign to target TotalEnergies, and its partners.

The article said that a number of NGOs were criticizing TotalEnergies for not putting the "Say on Climate", or climate strategy, to voted at the shareholder meeting. This was part "of the fossil fuel industry’s unabashed retreat on its human- and environmental commitments."

TotalEnergies announced earlier this year that it would not allow investors to vote on its sustainability report progress and that shareholders would only be consulted in the event of strategy changes. Instead, the company will hold a debate on climate change during its shareholders meeting.

It did not respond immediately to a comment request on the Friday action.

BNP Paribas condemned the "aggressive actions of Extinction Rebellion" and all forms physical violence.

BNP Paribas has stated that it is committed to supporting energy transition, and that all new funding that BNP Paribas provides to the energy sector will be almost exclusively allocated to low-carbon sources of energy.

The shareholders' meeting of TotalEnergies at its headquarters, in La Defense Business District, starts at 14:00 CET.

Extinction Rebellion announced that activists would gather in the afternoon at "a symbolic Parisian location" for a "Counter General Energy Assembly," but did not name the site. Reporting by Lucien Libert and Nicolas Coupe; Writing by GV de Clercq

(source: Reuters)