At HEC Paris, students disrupt a round table to denounce the "climaticide" projects of TotalEnergies and Shell

Shouting "and one and two and three degrees, for Patrick Pouyanné [the CEO of TotalEnergies]", a group of students took over the podium of an amphitheater where a Climate Day round table was being held organized by the school

At HEC Paris, students disrupt a round table to denounce the "climaticide" projects of TotalEnergies and Shell

Shouting "and one and two and three degrees, for Patrick Pouyanné [the CEO of TotalEnergies]", a group of students took over the podium of an amphitheater where a Climate Day round table was being held organized by the school. of commerce HEC Paris in its Jouy-en-Josas campus (Yvelines), on the theme of energy transition, Tuesday, May 23.

According to the program for the day, about ten representatives of companies (Shell, TotalEnergies, etc.), experts and institutions such as the French Observatory of Economic Conditions and the International Energy Agency were invited to this conference day.

"It must be said that it was necessary to dare"

"We, HEC students, demonstrated with joy and conviction our disagreement with their presence", explained the "HEC anti-greenwashing committee" in its press release sent after the action, assuring that "climaticide companies are no longer welcome at HEC Paris". They were "about thirty" students to participate, said one of them, Augustin de la Brosse, to Agence France-Presse.

In a video of about eight minutes, released by the organizers of the action, we see the students carry out a parody of a film festival - called "festival of greenwashing" - which aims to reward the company having "made the climate commitments the most superficial and who held the speeches most disconnected from his real activity". The students named Shell, TotalEnergies, Société Générale and HEC Paris.

"To explain to us how to save the planet, by inviting Shell, TotalEnergies, and Société Générale, it must be said that we had to dare," launched Augustin de la Brosse, a second-year Master's student, in front of an audience of several dozen people. The group unfurled a banner with the message "Stop EACOP", named after the controversial oil mega-project TotalEnergies is developing in Uganda and Tanzania.

The giants of the oil and gas sector are under increasing pressure from certain shareholders and environmental associations to stop any new hydrocarbon projects, which are polluting and harmful to the climate.

Like Shell on Tuesday, TotalEnergies is preparing to experience in turn an eventful annual general meeting on Friday, May 26, targeted by calls from several NGOs to block the event bringing together the shareholders of the French energy group.