Saskatoon StarPhoenix

Massachuse­tts accuses Exxon in lawsuit of Alberta costs deceit

Second suit in U.S. involving oilsands

- BOB WEBER

There is a second fraud lawsuit in the United States against Exxonmobil involving Alberta’s oilsands.

The lawsuit, filed on Thursday by the state of Massachuse­tts, accuses the oil multinatio­nal of misleading investors about what climate change measures could cost its operations — especially those in the oilsands.

“Exxonmobil’s misreprese­ntations falsely justified to investors its riskiest longterm investment­s, including Canadian bitumen oilsands projects,” says the state’s complaint, which has not been tested in court.

A similar action by New York’s attorney general went to trial this week.

An Exxon lawyer, calling them “bizarre and twisted,” has denied the accusation­s in that case. He said the allegation­s fail to take into account all the ways Exxon priced carbon risk into its decisions.

As in the New York case, Massachuse­tts alleges that Exxon told investors it evaluated its projects with a high and increasing price on carbon when it used a much lower figure that remained stable.

It points to extensive public documents and speeches by company executives assuring investors that projects were assessed with a carbon price as high as $80 a tonne.

It cites internal company directives suggesting the price that Exxon actually used was no more than $40 a tonne.

The lawsuit alleges the misreprese­ntation was even bigger for the oilsands, where Exxon is a major player through its Canadian subsidiary Imperial Oil.

Imperial has declined to comment on the fraud cases and referred questions to its parent company.

The lawsuit quotes internal documents referring to an “alternate methodolog­y.” It alleges the company would evaluate risk based on legislatio­n that was in place at the time.

“For certain Canadian oilsands projects ... Exxonmobil assumed ... that existing climate legislatio­n would remain in place, unchanged, indefinite­ly into the future.”

Alberta rules in place in 2015 were based on emissions intensity and have been calculated to have imposed a cost of $15 a tonne on carbon emissions.

“Exxonmobil applied these flat, lower proxy costs to both investment decisions at Canadian oilsands projects and reserves assessment­s,” the lawsuit claims.

“For the purposes of evaluating company reserves, Exxonmobil assumed that no new costs would be imposed in Alberta and that only 20 per cent of emissions would be taxed, indefinite­ly into the future.”

The “alternate methodolog­y” had the effect of reducing apparent carbon costs at Imperial’s Kearl oilsands mine by 94 per cent, the lawsuit alleges.

The lawsuit also quotes internal documents in which Imperial Oil employees pointed out that actually using the carbon price the company said it was using would result in large writedowns of oilsands assets.

The lawsuit also accuses Exxon of deceiving the public.

“Exxonmobil claims that it is ’working to decrease our annual carbon footprint,’ while in fact the company continues its unabated, business-as-usual rapid exploratio­n, developmen­t and production of fossil fuel reserves, including its most carbon-intensive reserves, such as those in the Canadian oilsands.”

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