Difference between revisions of "Total"

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'''Total''' (ToT) is a French oil and gas company.  
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'''Total''' (ToT) is a French oil and gas company.  In January 2014, Total Exploration & Production announced it would invest in fracking exploration in the UK - the first such investment by a major oil company. The move boosted confidence in the sector and its partners' share prices.  
  
In January 2014 Total announced it would invest in fracking exploration in the UK - first big investment by a major oil company.
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===Fracking partnership in the UK===
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{{‪Template:Fracking badge‬}}
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Total's licences are for a 240sq km area around the town of Gainsborough, that has been drilled for oil and gas for decades but only recently explored for its shale gas potential.  
  
:Total's licences are for a 240sq km area around the town of Gainsborough, that has been drilled for oil and gas for decades but has recently been explored for its shale gas potential.  
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Total has a 40% share in a licence in the Midlands currently operated by US firm [[eCorp]]. Chief executive of eCorp International, [[John Thrash]] said: "The entry of this highly respected global shale operator into the UK shale gas exploration effort is a watershed event, not only for the UK, but also, we believe, continental Europe."
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:The company's partners are a subsidiary of [[Dart Energy| Dart Energy Europe]], which has come under attack from environmentalists for applying for coal-bed methane wells in Scotland, plus [[Egdon Resources UK]], eCorp, and [[IGas]], which has been the target of a sustained campaign against by anti-fracking groups at its Barton Moss site in Salford.
  
===Fracking partnership in the UK===
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==People==
  
Total has a 40% share in a licence in the Midlands currently operated by US firm [[eCorp]]. Chief executive of eCorp International, [[John Thrash]] said: "The entry of this highly respected global shale operator into the UK shale gas exploration effort is a watershed event, not only for the UK, but also, we believe, continental Europe."
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*[[Leon Brittan]] declared his role as a member of Total's international advisory board until September 2014
:The company's partners are a subsidiary of [[Dart Energy]] Dart Energy Europe, which has come under attack from environmentalists for applying for coal-bed methane wells in Scotland, plus [[Egdon Resources UK]], eCorp, and [[IGas]], which has been the target of a sustained campaign against by anti-fracking groups at its Barton Moss site in Salford.
 
  
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==Meetings with ministers==
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According to the ''Guardian'', between 2010 and 2014 fossil fuel companies Total, [[BP]], [[Shell]], [[ExxonMobil]], [[ConocoPhillips]], [[Chevron]] and trade organisation [[Oil & Gas UK]] had at least 230 meetings with ministers. This figure is a significantly higher number than meetings with renewable energy companies and their campaign groups - with [[Greenpeace]] and [[Friends of the Earth]] having just 67 meetings between them.<ref> Rob Evans, Helena Bengtsson, Damian Carrington and Emma Howard [http://www.theguardian.com/environment/2015/apr/28/fossil-fuel-lobby-given-far-more-access-to-uk-ministers-than-renewables-analysis?CMP=share_btn_tw Shell and BP alone eclipse renewable energy sector on access to ministers] ''Guardian'', 28 April 2015, accessed 29 April 2015.</ref>
  
 
==Affiliations==
 
==Affiliations==
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*Member of the [[All Party Parliamentary Group on Unconventional Oil and Gas]] (which in 2014 is run by lobbying and PR firm [[Hill and Knowlton Strategies]].<ref> Register of All-Party Groups (As at 18 August 2014), parliament.co.uk </ref> Previously by [[Edelman]]).<ref> Register of All-Party Groups (As at 2013), parliament.co.uk </ref>
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*[[Task Force on Shale Gas]] (UK) - listed as a funder of this 'independent' group set up in October 2014, whose secretariat is lobbying and PR company [[Edelman]]
  
==People==
 
  
 
==Contact==
 
==Contact==

Latest revision as of 14:50, 27 January 2017

Total (ToT) is a French oil and gas company. In January 2014, Total Exploration & Production announced it would invest in fracking exploration in the UK - the first such investment by a major oil company. The move boosted confidence in the sector and its partners' share prices.

Fracking partnership in the UK

FrackWell.png This article is part of the Spinwatch Fracking Portal and project

Total's licences are for a 240sq km area around the town of Gainsborough, that has been drilled for oil and gas for decades but only recently explored for its shale gas potential.

Total has a 40% share in a licence in the Midlands currently operated by US firm eCorp. Chief executive of eCorp International, John Thrash said: "The entry of this highly respected global shale operator into the UK shale gas exploration effort is a watershed event, not only for the UK, but also, we believe, continental Europe."

The company's partners are a subsidiary of Dart Energy Europe, which has come under attack from environmentalists for applying for coal-bed methane wells in Scotland, plus Egdon Resources UK, eCorp, and IGas, which has been the target of a sustained campaign against by anti-fracking groups at its Barton Moss site in Salford.

People

  • Leon Brittan declared his role as a member of Total's international advisory board until September 2014

Meetings with ministers

According to the Guardian, between 2010 and 2014 fossil fuel companies Total, BP, Shell, ExxonMobil, ConocoPhillips, Chevron and trade organisation Oil & Gas UK had at least 230 meetings with ministers. This figure is a significantly higher number than meetings with renewable energy companies and their campaign groups - with Greenpeace and Friends of the Earth having just 67 meetings between them.[1]

Affiliations


Contact

Website:

Resources

Notes

  1. Rob Evans, Helena Bengtsson, Damian Carrington and Emma Howard Shell and BP alone eclipse renewable energy sector on access to ministers Guardian, 28 April 2015, accessed 29 April 2015.
  2. Register of All-Party Groups (As at 18 August 2014), parliament.co.uk
  3. Register of All-Party Groups (As at 2013), parliament.co.uk