Houston Chronicle

BP sees legal jeopardy in activists’ push for climate action

- By Kelly Gilblom

After paying more than $65 billion in legal costs for the Deepwater Horizon catastroph­e, BP is wary of the risk of lawsuits related to climate change.

CEO Bob Dudley raised the topic of class-action lawsuits twice during the company’s annual general meeting in Manchester, England, on Monday, saying he wouldn’t disclose certain climate targets, or even answer some questions from activist investors, because the risk of legal action in the U.S. was too high.

The sharp exchange between BP and two advocacy groups — Amnesty Internatio­nal and the Union for Concerned Scientists — shows the growing pressure on major oil companies to acknowledg­e their responsibi­lity for emissions of greenhouse gases. It also reflects the burgeoning efforts to hold them legally responsibl­e for the potentiall­y disastrous consequenc­es of rising global temperatur­es.

“You want to get us to make statements here in front of you that you can document that will lead to a class action,” Dudley said in response to one question from the Union of Concerned Scientists about pending U.S. litigation against energy companies. Such legal actions are “a business model in the United States,” he said.

In response to another questioner who suggested that selling oil and gas should be considered a violation of human rights, Dudley warned shareholde­rs this could be another attempt to mire BP in a class-action suit. An open letter from shareholde­rs including Aviva last week urging more transparen­cy could also end up providing lawsuit fodder, he said.

“BP absolutely believes in being transparen­t. Transparen­cy is beneficial to all,” Dudley said. “But we don’t want climate disclosure­s to be a tool for class-action lawyers.”

BP is still working through some of the 390,000 legal claims that resulted from the 2010 Deepwater Horizon catastroph­e, which killed 11 people and spilled millions of gallons of crude into the Gulf of Mexico. The company had to sell off about a third of its assets to pay the various legal costs associated with the disaster.

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