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Anti-fracking campaigners set to protest against Team Ineos at Tour de Yorkshire

Environmentalists call for ban on fossil fuels sponsorship - but pledge not to disrupt race

Environmental campaigners have outlined their plans for protests at the Tour de Yorkshire, which starts tomorrow, against the participation of Team Ineos – but insist they do not plan to disrupt the race itself.

Friends of the Earth and local protesters co-ordinated by the group Frack Free United are calling for firms involved with fossil fuels to be banned from sports sponsorship.

Petrochemicals giant Ineos, which officially took over Team Sky’s management company and sponsorship with effect from today is an obvious target.

However, there is an added angle to the planned protests at the Tour de Yorkshire given the route of this year’s fifth edition of the race.

Tomorrow’s opening stage from Doncaster to Selby includes a 3 kilometre stretch through land where Ineos holds a licence for drilling, as it does on a 5 kilometre section of the route of Saturday’s Stage 3 from Bridlington to Scarborough.

Simon Bowens, a campaigner with Friends of the Earth, said: “Cycling is a human-powered sport with fans who care passionately about the environment. Ineos does not fit into that agenda.

“Ineos is shameless in its hijacking of cycling to greenwash the terrible impact it has on our planet. The company speaks of the virtues of pedal power while at the same time producing millions of tonnes of plastic each year and trying to drill and frack large swathes of the British countryside including right here in Yorkshire.

“Ineos' plans for fracking are completely incompatible with fighting climate change,” he continued. “If we want to prevent further climate chaos they must not be allowed to dig up more fossil fuels.”

Besides Team Ineos, the petrochemicals group Total last month became lead sponsor of UCI Professional Continental outfit Direct Energie after acquiring the latter business in 2018. 

“Fossil fuels have no place in sports sponsorship," Bowens said. "Oil and gas companies are using advertising and sponsorship to distract from the awful damage their products cause in the exact same way that tobacco companies used to.

“Tobacco was banned from sports sponsorship due to the damaging health effects – this should also apply to fossil fuels which wreak havoc on the health of the planet,” he added.

We have approached Welcome To Yorkshire, who co-organise the race with ASO and in partnership with British Cycling, for a comment.

Simon joined road.cc as news editor in 2009 and is now the site’s community editor, acting as a link between the team producing the content and our readers. A law and languages graduate, published translator and former retail analyst, he has reported on issues as diverse as cycling-related court cases, anti-doping investigations, the latest developments in the bike industry and the sport’s biggest races. Now back in London full-time after 15 years living in Oxford and Cambridge, he loves cycling along the Thames but misses having his former riding buddy, Elodie the miniature schnauzer, in the basket in front of him.

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handlebarcam | 4 years ago
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First thing's first, someone needs to explain how Froome got pregnant:

//cdn.road.cc/sites/default/files/styles/main_width/public/team-ineos-new-kit.png?itok=bAteJRAh)

I know Ineos wants to squirts its fluids into every orifice it can find, and Jim Ratcliffe is personally tyring to fuck the whole country with Brexit, but putting a bun in your star rider's oven this close to the Tour de France seems unwise.

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