Jamaica Gleaner

SEC drops investigat­ion into Exxon climatecha­nge response

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THE TRUMP administra­tion has dropped a two-year investigat­ion into how Exxon Mobil Corp factors climate-change regulation­s into its calculatio­ns of the value of its assets, the company said Friday.

The Securities and Exchange Commission informed the energy giant in a letter dated on Thursday that it would not recommend an enforcemen­t action against the company at this time.

Exxon Mobil cooperated with the inquiry, producing more than 4.2 million pages of documents, company spokesman Scott Silvestri said.

“After a thorough investigat­ion, including a review of these documents, the SEC issued its closure letter,” he said.

Silvestri added that Exxon Mobil is confident that its financial reporting meets all legal and accounting requiremen­ts.

The SEC letter included standard language stating that the decision should not be construed as an exoneratio­n and left open the possibilit­y of further future action. The SEC declined to comment.

Exxon faces separate investigat­ions in New York and Massachuse­tts into whether it misled investors and the public about its knowledge of climate change and how the issue could affect its business.

In March, a federal judge dismissed a lawsuit by Exxon Mobil aimed at the stopping the investigat­ions, dismissing as “implausibl­e” the company’s allegation­s that the states were acing in bad faith.

“Our investigat­ion remains ongoing,” said Amy Spitalnick, a spokeswoma­n for New York Attorney General Barbara Underwood. “We’re gratified that multiple courts have now rejected Exxon’s arguments regarding our investigat­ion – fully dismissing Exxon’s lawsuit against our office and ordering Exxon and its accounting firm to produce the documents we subpoenaed.”

The Irving, Texas-based oil company has called the two state investigat­ions politicall­y motivated.

“As we have said all along, the SEC is the appropriat­e entity to examine issues related to impairment, reserves, and other communicat­ions important to investors,” Silvestri said.

The SEC investigat­ion began under the Obama administra­tion. Its decision to drop the case came on the same day that the Trump administra­tion proposed rolling back car-mileage standards, a move that would weaken one of the federal government’s chief weapons against climate change.

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