Updated: 20/11/2024
Exxon is under pressure – and it’s not only because of low oil prices. Rather it’s climate change and the associated shareholder and legal scrutiny that has put Exxon’s back firmly to the wall.
Following fast on the news that the US Securities and Exchange Commission has forced Exxon to allow shareholder votes on climate resolutions, two more US Attorneys General (AG) have joined those of New York and California in confirming investigations into Exxon’s climate change disclosures.
They now form part of a coalition of 20 AGs that came together this week to hold fossil fuel companies accountable for their climate deceptions. The idea of a US AG investigating a company of such political and economic heft – on climate change – once seemed unimaginable.
Maybe it’s that ‘unimaginability’ that has resulted in Exxon’s continued mishandling of its response to the recent climate-focused shareholder actions, journalistic exposés, and legal investigations. With every development, it increasingly appears that Exxon is wholly unequipped to deal with the tectonic political, legal, and societal shifts we’re witnessing on climate action.
The old certainty of a pro-industry White House, whoever the occupant, is fast eroding. Shareholders are starting to think beyond the next dividend cheque to the long-term sustainability – in financial terms – of this 19th century industry. And the societal standing of the industry appears destined to follow tobacco’s trajectory.
This is very much a brave new world for Exxon. Its navigation attempts to date suggest it is not in possession of the correct map.
One wonders if Exxon regrets its decision to forego membership of the European-led Oil and Gas Climate Initiative – a seemingly public relations driven effort to position oil companies as an essential part of the solution to climate change.
Instead Exxon and its US counterparts considered it unnecessary and went it alone. Under increasing attack, Exxon may have preferred some comforting company. But looking at Exxon’s reaction to recent events one doesn’t sense any acknowledgement of a missed opportunity.
Exxon didn’t want shareholders to vote on climate. It lost
Let’s take its reaction to shareholder efforts to force greater disclosure on climate risk through a shareholder resolution. Shareholders are increasingly aware of the fundamental organisational challenge that climate risk presents to oil companies.
But rather than follow Shell and BP’s tactical masterstroke of supporting similar resolutions, Exxon asked the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) to exclude its resolution from even going to a vote.
Did Exxon really think the SEC – itself facing calls from investors to do more on climate – would rule in its favour? If so, it looks like Exxon is using an old playbook for a game whose rules have fundamentally changed. Exxon’s seemingly out of date tactics are a worrying proxy for the company’s ability to handle the far greater risk posed by a low carbon transition.
The SEC rejected Exxon’s arguments and by allowing votes on key climate change resolutions have provided the opportunity for shareholders to make their views clear. Investors need to ensure Exxon’s board are using the right map to navigate that pathway or at the very least admit to currently following the wrong one.
Investigative journalists doing their job inflames Exxon
Then there’s the company’s initial response to the allegations made by Columbia journalism students via the Los Angeles Times about what Exxon knew and disclosed about climate change.
Ken Cohen, Exxon’s vice president of Public and Government Affairs chose to fire off a letter to the President of Columbia University, accusing Columbia’s reports of “cherry picking” and “distorting statements” and, most severely, “research misconduct.”
After referencing Exxon and the university’s “numerous and productive relationships”, Cohen finished by demanding a formal inquiry.
In response Steven Coll, the dean of Columbia Journalism School issued a scathing letter that stated: “Your letter disputes the substance of the two articles in a number of respects, but consists largely of attacks on the project’s journalists. I have concluded that your allegations are unsupported by evidence.
“More than that, I have been troubled to discover that you have made serious allegations of professional misconduct in your letter against members of the project team even though you or your Media Relations colleagues possess email records showing that your allegations are false.”
He concluded: “What your letter really advocates is that the factual information accurately reported in the article, and unchallenged by you, be interpreted differently.”
Exxon’s response was also criticised by crisis management experts like Jonathan Bernstein of Bernstein Crisis Management Inc, whose advises the company to “apologize”.
Funders of investigations also in the in the line of fire
The oil industry’s PR apparatus also rose up in misguided defense of Exxon – via the industry-funded ‘Energy in Depth’ site – targeting philanthropists including the Rockefeller Brothers Fund and Rockefeller Family Fund, ‘accusing‘ them of funding the InsideClimate News and Columbia reports.
Exxon followed up by calling the reports “discredited” and the funders “activists”. It’s not news that foundations fund public interest investigative journalism -and it doesn’t make funders activists just because the target doesn’t like the findings – but that didn’t stop Exxon from trying to drum up a scandal that doesn’t exist.
Exxon appears to see no irony in it and its industry peers funnelling millions of dollars to those fighting climate mitigation and challenging climate science.
And that brings us to the company’s official response to the latest AG investigations – those of Massachusetts and the US Virgin Islands. In a statement which kicks off with the warning that “we are actively assessing all legal options”, Exxon goes onto to warn of the “chilling effect” of the investigations on company research:
“The allegations are based on the false premise that ExxonMobil reached definitive conclusions about anthropogenic climate change before the world’s experts and before the science itself had matured, and then withheld it from the broader scientific community. Such a claim is preposterous … Contrary to activists’ claims, our company’s deliberations decades ago yielded no definitive conclusions …
“The investigations targeting our company threaten to have a chilling effect on private sector research. The allegations repeated today are an attempt to limit free speech and are the antithesis of scientific inquiry. Left unchallenged, they could stifle the search for solutions to the real risks from climate change.”
Exxon appears to believe no investigations should even take place. This is despite the very serious allegations going to securities and consumer laws. That’s how the law works: allegation – investigation – finding. But to Exxon this is all a case of “politically motivated” actions and “discredited reporting” that should be automatically dismissed.
The achievement of the ambition expressed in the Paris Agreement requires transformative legislation and corporate strategy.
In that context one might legitimately question: whose actions might have the most societally detrimental ‘chilling effect’ on tackling climate change? Exxon’s or the Attorneys General’s’?
Louise Rouse is an investment campaign consultant to Greenpeace UK.
Naomi Ages is attorney and campaigner with Greenpeace USA.
This article was originally published by Greenpeace Energydesk. Some additional reporting by The Ecologist.