03 December 2020

Fortum/Uniper leave Finnish government red-faced due to Paris-incompatible strategy

Helsinki, 3 December 2020 – Finnish majority state-owned energy company Fortum/Uniper has confirmed in its new strategy released today that it does not intend to align its business with the goals of the UN Paris climate agreement, opting instead to track inadequate national government coal phase-out plans, in defiance of the requirements of its majority shareholder.

The company’s plan to phase-out its European coal fleet overshoots the Paris-compatible 2030 deadline [1] by almost a decade, despite UN Secretary-General António Guterres earlier this month emphasising the need for all existing coal in the European Union and OECD countries to be phased out by 2030 at the latest [2]. The company’s strategy does belatedly commit Fortum/Uniper tothe mainstream pledge of carbon neutrality by 2050, but fails to rollback on the decision to open its controversial new Datteln 4 coal plant in Germany, or mention Uniper’s threat to sue the Dutch government over harm it says the country’s proactive 2030 coal phase-out policy would do to its future profits [3].

“Fortum is hiding behind the inadequate coal phase out plans of countries like Germany to excuse its responsibility to align with the UN Paris Climate Agreement,” said Sebastian Rötters, energy campaigner at urgewald. “Its determination to keep Datteln 4 operating until 2038, and drag out the conversion of its Russian coal plant fleet clearly trumps any climate commitment claims. Worse still, there is not a single word about Uniper’s threat to sue the Dutch government under the Energy Charter Treaty, showing that Fortum/Uniper may  still look to actively push back against climate action.” 

The Finnish government’s state ownership policy [5], requires its investee companies to take into account the UN Paris climate agreement’s pathway of limiting warming to 1.5C above pre-industrial levels, yet has so far failed to publically call out Fortum for its failure to do so. Fortum has promised a reduction of CO2 emissions in European generation of at least 50% by 2030, but this excludes much of its gas business and all its high carbon Russian operations [4]. It means Fortum and its new subsidiary, Uniper, trail far behind Nordic and European best practice in the energy sector.

“This strategy is a cause of serious embarrassment to the Finnish government and other progressive shareholders,” said Vera Kauppinen, campaign coordinator at Friends of the Earth Finland. “Fortum is lagging far behind its peers when it comes to climate action, and isn’t living up to the standards outlined by its majority shareholder. It’s high time the Finnish government stepped up the pressure on Fortum’s leadership and held them to its own state ownership policy, including opposing the re-election of directors at the next AGM in 2021 if necessary.” 

“While other European energy operators are ramping up their renewable energy production, Fortum has merely committed to a very slight increase in what was already a modest renewable portfolio,” said Kaarina Kolle, Senior Finance and Utility Coordinator at Europe Beyond Coal. “We fear the company intends to drag out its coal production, before pivoting to position fossil gas at the heart of its operations into the future, despite its very negative climate impact.” 

 

Contacts:

Kaarina Kolle, Senior Coal Finance and Utility Coordinator, Europe Beyond Coal
[email protected], +358 505913072 (Finnish, English).

Sebastian Rötters, energy campaigner, urgewald
[email protected], +49-163-4772758 (English, German)

Vera Kauppinen, Campaign coordinator, Friends of the Earth Finland
[email protected], +358 445769999 (Finnish, English).

Alastair Clewer, Communications Officer, Europe Beyond Coal
[email protected], +49 176 433 07 185

 

Notes:

  1. The EU and OECD countries must transition from coal by 2030 at the latest in order to meet the Paris 1.5°C temperature target. Source: Climate Analytics (September, 2019). “Global and regional phase-out requirements of the Paris Agreement: Insights from the IPCC Special Report on 1.5°C”
  2. https://www.politico.eu/article/no-new-coal-un-chief-tells-eu/
  3. https://meta.eeb.org/2019/11/07/sued-for-acting-on-climate-breakdown/
  4. More than 80% of Fortum’s emissions and more than 50% of Uniper’s come from Russia (excluding scope 3). Sources: https://www.fortum.com/media/2020/02/statement-board-directors-shareholder-wwf-finlands-proposal-amend-fortums-articles-association and https://www.uniper.energy/news/uniper-surpasses-2019-financial-targets-and-aims-for-climate-neutral-power-generation-in-europe-by-2035/
  5. Finnish Government Resolution on the State Ownership Policy 8 April 2020 (page 9). “Companies need to recognise the impacts of their own operations on the climate, environment and biodiversity as well as establish ambitious goals in this respect compared with their peer companies. State-owned companies are required to take into account the Government’s objective of a carbon neutral Finland by 2035 and the goals of the Paris Climate Convention to limit the rise in global temperature to 1.5 degrees.’
Read also
BLOG
REPORT
BRIEFING
PRESS RELEASE
INFOGRAPHIC

07 March 2024

BERLIN, 7 MARCH 2024 – Ten EU nations, representing over sixty percent of the bloc’s electricity generation capacity have committed […]

BLOG
REPORT
BRIEFING
PRESS RELEASE
INFOGRAPHIC

13 February 2024

Europe’s power sector must transition to a renewables based future, free from coal by 2030 and from fossil gas by 2035. These milestones are crucial in limiting global warming to 1.5°C and ensuring stable, affordable energy.

BLOG
REPORT
BRIEFING
PRESS RELEASE
INFOGRAPHIC

01 February 2024

Environmental activists protested outside Czech Prime Minister Petr Fiala’s residence today to mark two years since the Czech-Polish deal on the Turów coal mine crisis.

BLOG
REPORT
BRIEFING
PRESS RELEASE
INFOGRAPHIC

15 January 2024

To kickstart the new year, Slovakia and Austria have bid farewell to coal power. Slovakia has expedited its coal exit from 2030 to 2024, while rumours of a return to coal in Austria have failed to materialise, with record additions of solar and wind power easing out coal and helping to ensure security of supply.