Siemens Energy ready to be at centre of global climate debate - CEO
Reuters / Deutsche Welle
Siemens CEO Joe Kaeser is ready for Siemens Energy - an energy business it plans to spin off by September - to be at the centre of the global debate on climate change, he told the company鈥檚 annual general meeting in Munich, . 鈥淭hat is why we are setting up a sustainability committee, where independent leadership people will be represented,鈥 he said to protest Siemens' involvement in the Adani coal mine project in Australia. Kaeser it was 鈥渁lmost grotesque鈥 that Siemens had been singled out by environmentalists for criticism over its contract with the Adani coal mine project in Australia. He added that the company would become climate neutral by 2030.
The company also posted a weaker-than-expected industrial profit during its first quarter as a downturn in the manufacturing sector hit its flagship digital industries business and its wind power unit suffered losses, . Losses at its Gamesa wind power unit and feeble demand for large turbines pushed the company鈥檚 industrial profit down by almost a third.
., the CEO from , finds our protests "almost grotesque". Not almost, but actually grotesque is the support of coal mining amid the climate crisis.
鈥 Carla Reemtsma (@carla_reemtsma)
The company has come under fire for its participation in the controversial Adani coal mine project in Australia at a time when the southern continent has been ravaged by unprecedented wildfires. Climate movement Fridays for Future has argued that this would undermine all of the company's other climate action credentials. Kaeser reacted by offering prominent German FfF activist Luisa Neubauer a seat on Siemens Energy's board of directors, an offer which the 23-year-old student declined, arguing Siemens should instead put a climate-concerned scientist there.