Nigel Farage: Brexiteer, scourge of the woke – and eco-warrior?
Send a link to a friend
[April 30, 2021] By
Susanna Twidale
LONDON (Reuters) - Love him or hate him,
it's hard to accuse Nigel Farage of being boring or predictable - and
Britain's Brexit champion has blindsided his critics once again.
Fresh from leaving politics, the most high-profile face of the campaign
to leave the European Union has joined the advisory board of a Dutch
carbon offset company aiming to plant three trillion trees by 2030.
It may seem an unlikely career choice for a man who has been scathing
about wind power, criticised some environmental campaigners for what he
called climate alarmism and declared war on the "woke agenda".
Yet Farage said the attraction of the new role, as an adviser and
spokesman with Amsterdam-listed carbon offset company Dutch Green
Business (DGB), was about conservation and nature rather than just
combating climate change - on which he says the science is still not
completely settled.
"I think people will want to plant trees and increase biodiversity
through DGB who are actually quite sceptical about climate change.
Equally there will be others who are very concerned about it," the
57-year-old told Reuters.
"If their motivations are more about biodiversity than they are about
climate change, so what?" he said.
DGB CEO Selwyn Duijvestijn said the very image that made Farage appear
an unlikely choice would help to broaden the company's message to reach
people beyond those traditionally interested in nature.
"50% of the world love the Greta Thunbergs of this world to bring them
the message that nature is important, but then there is the other 50%
... the oil workers in Texas for instance ... and they would rather
listen to Nigel," Duijvestijn said.
Yet some established figures in the carbon market expressed concern over
the appointment.
[to top of second column] |
British Brexit Party leader Nigel Farage speaks during a visit at
Dover harbour, in Dover, Britain August 12, 2020. REUTERS/Matthew
Childs/File Photo
"We are astonished that an organisation that, presumably, seeks to be
seen as credible, has enlisted as a spokesperson and adviser someone who
has wilfully impeded progress on climate action by sowing doubt about
the reality and urgency of climate change," said Sarah Leugers, director
of communications at Gold Standard, one of the biggest carbon offset
registries.
DGB's first offsets have been bought from a forest project in Sierra
Leone from established decarbonisation project developer South Pole but
Duijvestijn says it expects to develop future projects itself.
Farage's entrance may force DGB to hasten that transition; South Pole
said it was concerned about his appointment and had decided to forgo
future agreements with the company.
Responding to the criticisms, DGB said Farage was an agent for change
who can be "a force for good" in championing reforestation.
Carbon offsets, or credits, are generated by emissions-reduction
projects, such as tree planting or shifts to less polluting fuels. These
credits are then bought by companies or individuals to help compensate
for their own emissions.
Currently the market is small, with a mostly bilateral, project by
project approach. But with more and more companies announcing net-zero
climate targets, the market is expected to balloon over the coming
years, attracting more financial institutions.
Some exchanges, such as CME, have launched futures offset contracts this
year, and DGB said it hoped to harness the commodities expertise of
Farage, who spent years as a trader on the London Metal Exchange.
(Reporting By Susanna Twidale; Editing by Pravin Char)
[© 2021 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2021 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content. |