Boris Johnson met with uranium lobbyist connected to new business partner while he was prime minister
The Independent revealed that Johnson gave a top job at energy consultancy firm to former aide Charlotte Owen
Your support helps us to tell the story
From reproductive rights to climate change to Big Tech, The Independent is on the ground when the story is developing. Whether it's investigating the financials of Elon Musk's pro-Trump PAC or producing our latest documentary, 'The A Word', which shines a light on the American women fighting for reproductive rights, we know how important it is to parse out the facts from the messaging.
At such a critical moment in US history, we need reporters on the ground. Your donation allows us to keep sending journalists to speak to both sides of the story.
The Independent is trusted by Americans across the entire political spectrum. And unlike many other quality news outlets, we choose not to lock Americans out of our reporting and analysis with paywalls. We believe quality journalism should be available to everyone, paid for by those who can afford it.
Your support makes all the difference.Boris Johnson failed to disclose that while serving as prime minister he met a uranium lobbyist connected to a co-director at his green energy consultancy Better Earth Limited.
The news comes after The Independent revealed that Mr Johnson had employed former aide Charlotte Owen as the firmās vice-president, despite facing fierce criticism for elevating her to the House of Lords at the age of 29.
Transparency campaigners have now warned there appear to be āserious public interest questionsā over the nature of the former Tory leaderās relationship with his co-director Amir Adnani, The Observer reports.
Mr Adnani, a Canadian citizen, is the founder, president and CEO of Uranium Energy Corp, a US-based mining company that had previously been championed by former Trump adviser Steve Bannon.
Mr Johnson met Scott Melbye, the executive vice-president of Uranium Energy Corp, in Westminster in May 2022, while he was still prime minister.
Better Earth was incorporated last December by Mr Adnani, who is the director of a number of offshore companies in the British Virgin Islands.
Companies House filings show āThe Rt Hon Alexander Boris de Pfeffel Johnsonā was added as a director and chair in May, while Ms Owen was added as vice-president this summer.
News of her latest role emerged in a two-line entry in her Lords register of interests in the last month. Her salary was not disclosed.
The website for Better Earth, which is not fully operational, says: āBetter Earth is an internationally facing company that seeks to contribute to global decarbonisation by developing energy transition projects in the renewable, net-zero power generation, emissions reduction and removal sectors.ā
The committee that oversees ex-ministerial appointments had warned Mr Johnson in April 2024 that the ābroad overlapā between his role in office and at the new company may entail āunknown risksā due to a lack of transparency over their clients.
A statement from the Cabinet Office noted the potential for a conflict of interests, particularly because of āthe unknown nature of Better Earthās clients ā specifically that there is a risk of a client engaging in lobbying the UK governmentā.
However, the Advisory Committee on Business Appointments was reassured that Mr Johnson ādid not meet with, nor did you make any decisions specific to Better Earth during your time in officeā.
The meeting with Mr Melbye was not recorded in the prime ministerās official diary.
A post about the meeting on X by Mr Adnani said Mr Johnson and Mr Melbye discussed nuclear power and uranium, as well as celebrating the PMās call for a new nuclear reactor to be built each year.
The entrepreneur was among those who supported the former leaderās Ā£700m investment in the controversial Sizewell C plant, and had tweeted: āBoris Johnson plans to sign off on new Ā£30bn nuclear plant in his final week in power! #uranium.ā
Speaking to The Observer, Professor Roger Cashmore, former chair of the UK Atomic Energy Authority, said: āWhat I really worry about is the technical expertise of many of the people coming in. Thatās where the real shortage is. And what that means is that thereās a lot of snake oil merchants in the business offering surefire investments when really thereās no such thing.
āAnd obviously Boris Johnson has no expertise in this area himself, heās just a frontman. I have no idea who these people are heās in business with so Iām not passing any judgement, but I do wonder how much homework heās done.ā
According to Companies House, Better Earth currently has no āperson with significant controlā after Mr Adnani ceased to be listed as such in December. Its initial filing was made with a single share owned by Nevada firm Emissions Reduction Corp.
Baroness Margaret Hodge, the former Labour MP, told the paper: āWhat on earth is an ex-prime minister of the United Kingdom doing, working for a company with an opaque structure?
āIn my experience, those who choose to have a UK company owned by a foreign entity only do that because they may have something to hide. What is it in this case? Given the sensitivities around nuclear capabilities, we should know who he is in business with, where the money is coming from and why he is using a financial structure that appears to hide the beneficial ownership of the company.ā
His role within Better Earth has also raised questions over Ms Owenās appointment, just over a year after he caused a political storm by naming her in his honours list.
At the time, she was a previously unknown junior adviser who had only worked alongside Mr Johnson for a matter of months, before taking up her title as Baroness of Alderly Edge in July last year.
In her first speech in the Lords, she praised the former PM āwho put a great deal of trust in meā¦ I will be forever grateful not only for this but for his kindness and encouragementā.
Boris Johnson and Uranium Energy Corp have been approached for comment.
Join our commenting forum
Join thought-provoking conversations, follow other Independent readers and see their replies
Comments