Khaleej Times

Exxon ‘misleading investors’ on cost of climate regulation­s

- David Koenig

dallas — The New York attorney general said Exxon Mobil is misleading investors about how it estimates the potential cost of climatecha­nge regulation­s.

The New York Attorney General Eric Schneiderm­an said in a court filing on Friday that Exxon’s calculatio­ns “may be a sham.” He said the oil company told investors it used one estimate of regulatory costs on projects, but then applied a lower estimate. That makes some of its oil and gas projects look like they will be more profitable and less risky.

The accusation surfaced the same week that shareholde­rs pressed Exxon to disclose more details about how regulation­s designed to limit climate change will affect its business. An Exxon spokesman said the attorney general’s charges were inaccurate and his investigat­ion was motivated by politics and publicity.

Schneiderm­an made the accusation­s as he asked a state court to

Attorney general’s charges were inaccurate and his investigat­ion was motivated by politics and publicity Exxon spokesman

force Exxon Mobil Corp to turn over more documents and witnesses for his investigat­ion into the Texas-based oil giant.

Exxon has said that since 2007 it has applied a “proxy cost of carbon” when judging oil and gas projects. That is an estimate of the future costs of complying with regulation­s to limit greenhouse gas emissions from burning fossil fuels like oil and natural gas.

Schneiderm­an charged that while the company said in 2014 that the additional regulatory cost of fossil fuel could approach $80 per tonne of greenhouse gas emissions by 2040, he found evidence indicating that Exxon privately used lower figures but never told investors about the “secret internal” calculatio­ns.

The carbon-cost estimates are important because understati­ng regulatory costs could lead the company to push ahead with financiall­y risky projects. Schneiderm­an said if Exxon had used its publicly reported estimate instead of the lower internal figure, at least one oil-sands project in Canada would have been projected to lose money.

Exxon spokesman Scott Silvestri said documents already turned over to Schneiderm­an show that the company has accurately described its use of carbon-cost estimates.

On Wednesday, investors holding 62 percent of shares cast voted for a resolution to push the company to disclose more about how climate-change regulation­s will affect its business. The Exxon board opposed the nonbinding resolution.

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