During the demonstration in front of Siemens this Wednesday in Munich, Germany. - Christof STACHE / AFP

"Siemens, get out of the coal!" ": Environmental activists were invited Wednesday in Munich to the general assembly of the German industrial giant to denounce his participation in a controversial mining project in Australia. In the morning, a hundred demonstrators formed a human chain in front of the conference hall of the Olympiahalle. A demonstration was to follow in the early afternoon.

These actions crystallize a fundamental trend: Siemens has become a target for environmentalists who criticize the manufacturer of turbines, trains or wind turbines for being too involved in projects and contracts deemed harmful to the climate. A ball-shaped subject for the group. It now tends to dominate all the others, including the financial results announced Wednesday but relegated to the background, with a quarterly net profit down slightly and a turnover up 1% year on year.

Siemens linked to Australian coal mine

The object of the dispute: a contract in the amount of 18 million euros, which provides that Siemens provide the signage for the railway of the Carmichael project, a huge open-pit coal mine in Queensland in Australia, near the Great Barrier Reef. Faced with its shareholders, Siemens boss Joe Kaeser defended himself by finding "almost grotesque" that the group had become the bane of environmentalists. He invited them to "see what Siemens is actually doing for the environment".

Supported by several environmental organizations, notably Extinction Rebellion, Fridays for Future intends to take advantage of the annual general meeting of shareholders to increase the pressure on the company. "Until Siemens backtrack, we will continue our mobilization," warned a representative of this movement, Helena Marschall. She is invited by a shareholder organization to speak at the meeting in the afternoon, like other activists.

"Catastrophic" decision

The boss of Siemens had agreed to meet Luisa Neubauer, leader of Fridays for Future in Germany in mid-January, about the Australian mining project, after a day of mobilization in ten cities. In the process, Siemens had maintained its participation in the project, explaining that it wanted to "respect the word given" in order to "remain credible". A decision deemed "catastrophic" by environmental activists.

The construction of the Adani Indian conglomerate mine in western Australia has been plagued by legal and regulatory problems since its inception and by the mobilization of organizations tirelessly denouncing its environmental impact. Environmentalists argue that the exploitation of the mine will contribute to global warming and degrade the Great Barrier, classified as World Heritage.

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