For half a century, fossil fuel giants have maintained that their liability ends at the point of sale, shifting the burden of carbon combustion onto drivers and households. The Paris judicial tribunal’s decision rejects this premise, finding that corporate industrial choices and energy portfolios are the primary drivers of downstream emissions. While the ruling does not mandate an immediate halt to fossil fuel expansion, it compels TotalEnergies to revise its vigilance plan within six months to explicitly account for the environmental impact of its products.
The verdict arrives as Europe endures a brutal summer, with heatwaves stretching public infrastructure to the breaking point. Internal archives dating back to 1971 reveal that the company’s predecessors, including Elf, understood the risks of climate change—including polar ice melt—decades ago. Instead of pivoting, executives prioritized lobbying against carbon taxation and continued heavy investment in oil and gas. Despite the current climate, TotalEnergies plans to direct three-quarters of its capital toward fossil fuels through 2030, reinforcing a business model that internal documents once predicted would be irreversible.



Comments (0)
No comments yet. Be the first!