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French police teargas climate protesters

PARIS (AFP) – Police fired tear gas to disperse climate protesters trying to block an annual general meeting of French oil giant TotalEnergies in Paris yesterday.

The demonstration caps a series of tumultuous shareholder meetings at major corporations in Europe as activists step up pressure on companies to reduce their carbon footprints.

At dawn in the French capital, dozens of protesters tried to enter a part of the street that was blocked off by police trucks to secure the concert hall where TotalEnergies was scheduled to hold its meeting.

A dozen demonstrators managed to sit on the ground in front of the venue, the Salle Pleyel, and were teargassed after ignoring three warnings issued by officers using megaphones.

Some shareholders began to enter the hall as the French company insisted that the meeting would take place while forbidding attendees and journalists to use their smartphones inside.

French gendarmes stand guard next to climate protesters holding a placard reading as “Floods, Heatwave, Drought, Pandemia, The World according to Total” in front of Salle Pleyel during a demonstration in Paris, France. PHOTO: AFP

Protesters chanted “all we want is to knock down Total” and – in reference to rising global temperatures – bellowed “one, two and three degrees, we have Total to thank”.

Some poured black liquid over their heads.

“We won’t let them go,” said spokeswoman for climate campaigners Alternatiba Marie Cohuet.

TotalEnergies “embodies the worst of what is done in terms of the exploitation of people and the planet”, Cohuet said.

The company wanted to avoid the chaos of last year when activists prevented some shareholders from attending the annual meeting.

Climate campaigners are growing impatient with oil majors and other companies over their impact on the planet.

“Total invests in renewable energies, but the challenge is to go faster, stronger and above all faster,” she told FranceInfo radio.

TotalEnergies Chief Executive Patrick Pouyanne rejected criticism against his group in an interview with La Croix newspaper on Wednesday, saying the company must meet growing demand from developing nations.

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