The German company had said it would decide by Monday on its involvement in the project.
BS
: German engineering group Siemens
said on Sunday it will fulfil its contractual obligations to a
controversial coal mining project in Australia's outback, despite
criticism by climate activists including Greta Thunberg.
Siemens
was awarded a contract last year to provide signalling technology for
a railway line to transport coal from a coal mine run by India's
Adani
Group in the outback.
The
German company had said it would decide by Monday on its involvement
in the project.
On
Saturday Thunberg called for Siemens to review its role in the
project.
"There
is practically no legally and economically responsible way to unwind
the contract without neglecting fiduciary duties," Siemens Chief
Executive Joe Kaeser said in a statement.
Local
and federal governments approved the project based on the
Environmental Protection and Biodiversity Conservation Act 1999 as
well as hundreds of pages of environmental impact statements, Siemens
said.
"While
I do have a lot of empathy for environmental matters, I do need to
balance different interests of different stakeholders, as long as
they have lawful legitimation for what they do," Kaeser said.
"Keeping
our promises is Siemens̢۪ highest priority. Only being a
credible partner whose word counts also ensures that we can remain an
effective partner for a greener future." Environmental activists
are concerned that the continued use of coal will lead to higher
emissions of carbon dioxide, a gas which is linked to global warming.
Siemens
said that it had pledged to achieve carbon neutrality by 2030 and it
fundamentally shares the goal of making fossil fuels redundant over
time.
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