In Midst of ExxonMobil Climate Denial Scandal, Company Hiring Climate Change Researcher

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Caught in the crosshairs of an ongoing New York Attorney General investigationย exploring its role in studying the damage climate change could cause since the 1970’s and then proceeding to fund climate science denial campaigns, ExxonMobil has announced an interesting jobย opening.ย 

No, not the new lawyer who will soon send the โ€œprivate empireโ€ billable hours for his defense work in the New York AG probe, though that’s a story for another day. Exxon is hiring for a climate change researcher to work in its Annandale, New Jersey research park facility.ย ย ย 

โ€œWe are seeking a candidate to advance research and assessment providing fundamental understanding on global climate change issues,โ€ reads the job description.

Itย continues:

โ€œThe candidate would lead research in areas such as Earth systems science and the role of technologies and systems in managing the risks posed by global climate change. The successful candidate will develop collaborative research efforts, contribute significant publications, contribute to assessments (e.g., the IPCC) and demonstrate strong scientific leadership within both the corporation and external scientific communityโ€ฆSignificant demonstrated experience in researching Earth systems science, integratedย assessmentย and energy modeling is preferred.ย โ€

It sounds a lot like a job description of a person who worked at theย unit Exxonย hadย at its disposal until the company cut 83 percentย of its climate research budget and started funding denial to the tune of $31 million since 1998.

Exxon would proceed to fund think-tanks โ€” such as Heartland Institute, Cato Institute, American Enterprise Institute and a whole network of individual deniers โ€” that ridiculed the same climate change models its researchers created โ€” and that its new researcher will also create. Former CEO Lee Raymond also is on record berating the same models, as is the company via its ads.

And former Exxon lobbyist William O’Keefe, most recently CEO of theย George C. Marshall Instituteย (recently rebranded as the CO2 Coalition), was recently exposed in a Greenpeace investigation detailing the willingness of certain academics to generate industry-friendly testimony and op-eds on a for-hire basis. Exxon has served as a major funder of the George C. Marshall Institute.

Deepย Cuts

In a story running two days after Exxon announced it would be hiring, InsideClimate news reported on the deep cuts in the 1980’s to Exxon’s climate researchย program.

โ€œFacing a budget crunch and sensing that any government efforts to clamp down on carbon pollution were a long way off, Exxon terminated two especially innovative experiments,โ€ detailed InsideClimate. โ€œThe cuts reversed the course that the company followed in the late 1970s, when top company scientists warned Exxon’s management for the first time of the risks of climate change, and launched internal research programs unparalleled among its oil industryย peers.โ€

InsideClimate published the memorandum in which ExxonMobil decided to make the cuts, and twoย other memos explaining which climate research programs would receiveย cuts.

Why cut climate research, though? The company calculated correctly โ€” in large part due to its own lobbying and denial echo chamber efforts โ€” that no strong regulations to curtail greenhouse gas emissionsย loomed on either the domestic or globalย level.

COP Writing on Wall or PR?

So why hire a climate researcher now? Perhaps Exxon sees the writing on the wall, as it did the first time around the block in the 1970’s, that climate change is a global priority that demands attention.ย ย 

In a recent blog post, Exxonย claimed to support the cutting of a deal โ€” a revenue-neutral carbon tax to be precise โ€” at the United Nations climate summit inย Paris.ย 

โ€œWhen it comes to COP21, we are hopeful that an agreement will be reached for meaningful action to address the risks surrounding climate change,โ€ the company wrote. โ€œWe encourage those gathered in Paris to embrace a principled approach to climate change risk. Such an approach holds great promise for ensuring that effective action will be taken to meet this globalย challenge.โ€

The company has also spoken out about the climate change costs of not coming to a substantive deal inย Paris.ย 

Of course, Exxon continues to bankroll the campaigns of climate change denier politicians such as U.S. Sen. James Inhofe (R-OK), U.S. Sen. Fred Upton (R-MI), U.S. Sen. David Vitter (R-LA) and manyย others.

In fact, the company has already handed out $349,250 in traceable money to Republican congressional candidatesย so far in the 2016 electoral cycle. At this point in its historyย โ€” though not always the caseย โ€” the GOP has steeped itself in science denial and has railed against the Paris Agreement since nearly 200 countries agreed to it onย Saturday.

Inhofe, recipient thus far ofย $7,500 in Exxon campaign cash during this cycle, delivered a recorded video keynote address at a Heartland Institute climate denial gatheringย held in conjunction with the Paris UN climateย talks.

Exxon also has spent millions lobbying to lift the U.S. oil export ban, according to lobbying disclosure forms reviewed by DeSmog, a de facto form of climate denial given the greenhouse gas emissions implications of lifting theย ban.

Considering these facts, the Exxon climate research hire appears much more likely to fit under the umbrella of Exxon’s ongoing crisis communications PR plan, as the company continues to spend big lobbying for status quo (industry friendly) climate and energyย policies.

Photo Credit: lculig | Shutterstock

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Steve Horn is the owner of the consultancy Horn Communications & Research Services, which provides public relations, content writing, and investigative research work products to a wide range of nonprofit and for-profit clients across the world. He is an investigative reporter on the climate beat for over a decade and former Research Fellow for DeSmog.

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