Direct Lobbying Transparency
Overall Assessment | Comment | Score |
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Strong | VINCI provides a high level of transparency on the substance of its climate-policy engagement, naming a suite of identifiable measures it has worked on – including France’s “Transition énergétique” law, Germany’s “Energiewende”, Spain’s “Sostenibilidad Energetica”, the United Kingdom’s “Climate Change Bill”, and the “Loi Climat et Résilience” adopted in 2021. It also states the concrete outcomes it supports, such as reducing greenhouse-gas emissions 40 % from 1990 levels by 2030, cutting overall energy use 50 % by 2050, and lowering fossil-fuel primary energy consumption 30 % between 2012 and 2030, and frames construction-waste reduction as a further goal linked to the French legislation. The company describes several engagement channels – contribution through its construction and energy businesses, participation in workshops and working groups, and regular meetings with municipal actors via its Fabrique de la Cité think tank – but it does not identify the specific governmental bodies or individual policymakers it approaches, leaving the mechanics of its lobbying less clear. Overall, the disclosures give rich detail on the policies addressed and the results sought, while providing only general insight into how and to whom those messages are delivered. | 3 |