Byย Olivia Rosane, EcoWatch. Reposted with permission from EcoWatch.
ExxonMobilย could be the second company afterย Monsantoย to lose lobbying access to members of European Parliament after it failed to turn up to a hearing Thursday into whether or not the oil giant knowingly spread false information aboutย climate change.
The call to ban the company was submitted by Green Member of European Parliament (MEP) Molly Scott Cato and should be decided in a vote in late April,ย The Guardian reported.
ExxonMobil faces EU parliament ban after no show at climate hearing.
It could become the second multinational โ after Monsanto โ to lose access to MEPs, parliamentary meetings and digital resources. #PollutersOut #ExxonKnewEU https://t.co/b54SAQgCC3 via @ArthurNelsen pic.twitter.com/UvbxHRBjT5
โ CEO (@corporateeurope) March 22, 2019
โThis is the company that denied the science, despite knowing the damage their oil exploitation was causing; which funded campaigns to block action on climate and now refuses to face up to its environmental crimes by attending today’s hearing,โ Cato said in aย statementย released Thursday. โWe cannot allow the lobbyists from such corporations free access to the corridors of the European parliament. We must remove their badgesย immediately.โ
The only other company to be denied lobby access to MEPs is Monsanto, which wasย banned for similar reasonsย in 2017 after it failed to turn up to a hearing on whether it had improperly influenced studies on the safety ofย glyphosate, the active ingredient in itsย Roundupย weedkiller.
ExxonMobil contended it could not attend the hearing because of ongoing climate litigation in the U.S. It was concerned that any comments made at the hearing โcould prejudice those pending proceedings,โ according to a letter obtained byย AFP.
Evidence presented at the hearing Thursday suggested that ExxonMobil had known since 1959 that global warming caused by the burning ofย fossil fuelsย โwas sufficient to melt the ice cap and submerge New York,โ Harvard University researcher Geoffrey Supran told AFP.
Supran presented the findings of a peer-reviewed study he had co-authored looking at almost 200 company documents over a period of decades. Four-fifths of internal documents acknowledged the science behind climate change, while a similar percentage of paid newspaper editorials in the U.S. cast doubt on that sameย science.
Exxon challenged us to โread all the documentsโ. We did. Here’s what we found using peer-reviewed content analysis: https://t.co/XYCDtCUl8m pic.twitter.com/n0xv2OZXFL
โ Geoffrey Supran (@GeoffreySupran) August 23, 2017
โIt is the overwhelming consensus of experts studying the history of fossil fuel funding that companies, including ExxonMobil, have orchestrated, funded and perpetuated climate misinformation to mislead the public and politicians, and stifle action,โ Supran said, as reported in The Guardian. โUnfortunately, they largelyย succeeded.โ
ExxonMobil continues to deny charges that it spread climateย denial.
โWe reject the false allegation that ExxonMobil suppressed scientific research on climate change. News reports that claim we reached definitive conclusions about the science of climate change decades before the world’s experts are simply not accurate and have long since been debunked,โ the company wrote in a statement provided to Theย Guardian.
However, another study released Friday suggests that ExxonMobil’s climate denialism isn’t just a matter of history. Theย InfluenceMapย report found that the five largest publicly traded oil and gas companies, including ExxonMobil, had invested more than $1 billion of shareholder funds on misleading climate-related lobbying and branding in the three years since theย Paris agreement.
I just testified as an expert witness to EU Parliament about ExxonMobil’s decades of climate denial + delay. Between being the first major hearing of its kind, a leaked Exxon memo, & the rising prospect of Exxon being banned from EU lobbying, it was an interesting day. THREAD pic.twitter.com/lRaBuqd4WQ
โ Geoffrey Supran (@GeoffreySupran) March 22, 2019
During that three year period, ExxonMobil, Royal Dutch Shell, Chevron, BP and Total invested $110 billion in new fossil fuel production while they are projected to spend only $3.6 billion on climate friendly alternatives such asย renewable energy. Meanwhile, they spent $195 million a year to market themselves as green leaders and $200 million a year to lobby on climate policy, theย Huffington Post reported. Those lobbying efforts included theย spending blitzย by BP and Chevron that helped defeat a carbon tax in Washington State during the 2018 midterm elections,ย The Guardian reported.
โOil majors’ climate branding sounds increasingly hollow and their credibility is on the line,โ report author Edward Collins told The Guardian. โThey publicly support climate action while lobbying against binding policy. They advocate low-carbon solutions but such investments are dwarfed by spending on expanding their fossil fuelย business.โ
A new report by a British think tank estimates that since the 2015 Paris Agreement, oil giants spent more than $1 billion on climate lobbying and public relations campaigns aimed at maintaining public support for climate action. #ClimateChangehttps://t.co/ntGGdl0zLv
โ DeSmogBlog (@DeSmogBlog) March 22, 2019
Main image:ย ExxonMobil Torrance Refinery. Credit:ย waltarrrrr,ย CC BY–NC–NDย 2.0
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