The head of TotalEnergies has told shareholders that new oilfields have to be developed to meet global demand, as the annual meetings of the French energy giant and one of its biggest shareholders were picketed by climate activists.
Police said they detained 173 people among hundreds who gathered outside the Paris headquarters of Amundi, one of the worldâs biggest investment managers and a major TotalEnergies shareholder.
Climate activists also gathered hours before the TotalEnergies annual general meeting opened. Greenpeace members unfurled a huge âWantedâ banner calling its chief executive, Patrick Pouyanné, âthe leader of Franceâs most polluting companyâ.
The banner was quickly taken down by police.
Several hundred activists belonging to Extinction Rebellion gathered outside Amundi for its general meeting.
A few dozen protesters forced their way into Amundiâs tower block, daubing graffiti on the walls and smashing some windows, police said. Amundi said eight of its security staff were injured.
The activists say TotalEnergies is contributing to global warming and the destruction of biodiversity through its gas and oil activities.
Pouyanne told shareholders that higher oil prices prompted by insufficient fossil fuel output âwould quickly become unbearable for the populations in emerging countries, but also in our developed countriesâ.
Demand for oil was growing in line with the global population, he said.
But Pouyanne said TotalEnergies would pursue its âbalanced strategyâ of developing both fossil fuel and low-carbon energy production.
TotalEnergies had proved it was possible âto be a profitable, or even the most profitable, company while pursuing a transformationâ toward cleaner energy, he said.
At Fridayâs meeting, nearly 80% of shareholders approved the companyâs climate strategy, with more than 75% also voting to renew Pouyanne as CEO for three years.
Pouyanné, who last month floated the idea of a New York listing for the company, told shareholders there was âno questionâ of TotalEnergies leaving France.
He said in April that there was âa caseâ to move from the Paris CAC 40 index to New York in search of higher valuations and larger markets.
The French president, Emmanuel Macron, asked by Bloomberg if he would be âhappyâ with such a move, responded: âNot at all and I would be very surprised.â