Direct Lobbying Transparency
Area | Transparency | Score |
---|---|---|
Direct Policy Lobbying | Heidelberg Materials has clearly specified the policies being lobbied, including the Construction Products Regulation, Raw Material Strategy, Waste Framework Directives, Alternative Fuel Legislation, CCUS, Funding Schemes, Green Procurement Schemes, Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism, Emission Trading Schemes, Construction and Building Codes, and the Renewable Energy Directive. | 69 |
Lobbying Mechanism | Heidelberg Materials has disclosed both the specific lobbying mechanisms (public consultations, bilateral meetings, public hearings, advocacy at conferences, engagement with associations, etc.) and the target entities (European Parliament, national governments, regional and local administrations). | 68 |
Policy Outcomes Sought | Heidelberg Materials has outlined the government policy outcomes it aims to achieve through its lobbying efforts, such as standardisation of low-carbon products, sustainability characteristics in regulations, co-processing recognition, funding for decarbonisation technologies, green procurement policies, carbon pricing, and access to renewable energy. | 75 |