A flag bearing the company logo of Royal Dutch Shell flies outside the energy giant's head office in The Hague, Netherlands, in 2014. Photo: Peter Dejong / AP

By Samantha Raphelson
18 May 2017 (NPR) – President Trump is expected to face pressure from European Union leaders at the G-7 summit in Italy next week to keep the U.S. in the Paris Climate Treaty. Trump recently signed an executive order aiming to roll back President Barack Obama’s Clean Power Plan but did not address the Paris agreement. European Union leaders aren’t the only ones who are imploring Trump to keep the U.S. as part of the largest climate agreement in history. Ben van Beurden is the CEO of Shell, the giant energy company. Even though he’s in the business of selling fossil fuels, van Beurden tells NPR’s Ari Shapiro the U.S. should stay in the climate agreement. “We believe climate change is real,” van Beurden says. “We believe that the world needs to go through an energy transition to prevent a very significant rise in global temperatures. And we need to be part of that solution in making it happen.” Opponents of the Paris climate agreement argue that governments should not require companies to limit their oil and gas exploration projects. But van Beurden says the industry wants governments around the world to develop a consistent policy. “One of the biggest concerns that I have around climate change is the unpredictability in which governments will go about it,” van Beurden says. “If we have a very clear understanding that governments, successive governments, will continue to act consistently with a certain policy set that we believe in, I have no issue with it.” Exxon Mobil, Chevron, and BP have also pledged their support for the Paris climate pact. Exxon CEO Darren Woods wrote in a blog post the Paris accord creates “an effective framework for all countries to address rising emissions.” [more]

Energy Companies Urge Trump To Remain In Paris Climate Agreement