A new report by InfluenceMap analyzes the corporate clients of the Big Six PR and advertising agency holding companies – Dentsu, Havas, IPG, Publicis, Omnicom, and WPP.
New InfluenceMap research reveals that many European companies and industry associations from the chemicals, metals, energy, and utilities sectors covered by the LobbyMap platform supported circular economy provisions under the EU Critical Raw Materials Act, despite resistance from some mining and a...
The 2024 update to InfluenceMap's annual analysis of corporate leaders in climate policy engagement.
A Historical Analysis of the Oil and Gas Playbook Against Renewables and Electric Vehicles
How automaker lobbying threatens the global transition to electric vehicles
This briefing analyzes automotive industry engagement on Indian climate policy for light-duty vehicles for the first time. It covers the climate policy engagement of the ten largest automakers operating in India and the automaker's primary industry association, the Society of Indian Automobile Manuf...
Cross-referencing the UNFCCC-disclosed list of registered attendees against InfluenceMap’s database on corporate lobbying shows the balance in favor of companies whose policy engagement and communications are pushing for policy pathways likely to lock-in warming scenarios in excess of the internatio...
This briefing contains an overview of the corporate lobbying detected by InfluenceMap related to fossil fuels for the month of December 2023.
New InfluenceMap research finds that nearly the same collective of electric utilities that fought the Clean Power Plan between 2014 and 2019 are lining up again to oppose the Biden Administration's power plant rules.
This briefing contains an overview of corporate lobbying that InfluenceMap detected related to fossil fuels for Q3 2024.
This briefing is the second in a regular series providing an overview of corporate policy engagement on methane policy globally as captured on InfluenceMap’s Methane Platform.
Key corporate policy engagement trends following Labor's election in May 2022
The report assesses the alignment of Japan's flagship $1 Tr GX Policy with “Science-Based Policy” (SBP) using benchmarks derived from IPCC's guidance on limiting global temperature rise to the 1.5°C target, and the corporate engagement with the policy.
Despite the CA100+ initiative having clear expectations on Paris-aligned lobbying, only 2 of the 31 CA100+ target companies found to be engaging on the taxonomy appear to be supportive of its science-based guidance with 4 companies advocating mixed or unclear positions, leaving more than 80% pushing...
This research details an active effort from the US oil and gas industry capitalize on the war in Ukraine to advocate for long-standing policy asks relating to the continued expansion of oil and gas. The research looks at the month following the invasion of Ukraine on the 24th February 2022. This has...
The five Big Tech companies (Apple, Alphabet, Amazon, Facebook & Microsoft) account for more than 25% of the value of the S&P500 and 20% of its Q3 2020 profits.
Business Roundtable and the US Chamber align with their most oppositional members in supporting legal action against the SEC
This briefing explores how the global insurance industry is engaging to shape climate risk supervisory guidance being developed by the International Association of Insurance Supervisors (IAIS).
This briefing outlines how elements of an ‘anti-ESG’ campaign by fossil fuel, financial and cross-sector industry groups have been incorporated into the current policy priorities of US House Republicans.
This briefing outlines the strategies and tactics of the Canadian oil sands group Pathways Alliance to limit climate action.
This report assesses global corporate advocacy on carbon capture and storage (CCS) in the context of the energy transition. It examines the high-level positions of 21 national governments on CCS and maps out linkages between corporate and government messaging on the issue.
This bulletin offers insights on the climate policy engagement of major steel companies and their industry associations from the first half of 2024.
New research demonstrates that the world’s largest companies lack transparency around their biodiversity-related advocacy, while retaining membership of industry associations actively opposing critically needed policy.
New research demonstrates that industry associations representing key sectors and some of the largest companies in the world are lobbying to delay, dilute and rollback critically needed policy aimed at preventing and reversing biodiversity loss in the EU and US.