The Oklahoman

New York sues ExxonMobil over carbon cost figures

- BY STEVEN MUFSON

New York Attorney General Barbara Underwood sued ExxonMobil on Wednesday, accusing the oil giant of defrauding investors about the financial risks of climate change and lying about how it was calculatin­g potential carbon costs.

Unlike other lawsuits against big oil companies alleging the concealmen­t of scientific studies confirming climate change, the New York lawsuit accuses ExxonMobil of assuring its investors that it was using a theoretica­l price for carbon in evaluating projects when, in fact, it often used a different price or none at all.

The lawsuit said that “this fraud reached the highest levels of the company,” including former Exxon CEO and former Secretary of State Rex Tillerson, who the lawsuit said knew for years that the company “was deviating” from public statements and was using two sets of calculatio­ns about future regulation of greenhouse gas emissions.

“The attorney general is effectivel­y charging them with keeping two sets of books — one for internal purposes, one for external,” said Tom Sanzillo, director of finance at the Institute for Energy Economics & Financial Analysis, which does research on energy and the environmen­t. “The result is a distortion of the value of the company.”

ExxonMobil spokesman Scott J. Silvestri called the lawsuit meritless.

“The New York attorney general’s office doubled down on its tainted, meritless investigat­ion by filing a complaint against ExxonMobil,” he said. “These baseless allegation­s are a product of closed-door lobbying by special interests, political opportunis­m and the attorney general’s inability to admit that a threeyear investigat­ion has uncovered no wrongdoing.”

The lawsuit says that ExxonMobil’s dual accounting calculatio­ns had a huge impact on the purported value of the company. It says that the company’s failure to apply proxy costs to 14 of its oil sands projects in Alberta, Canada, resulted in undercount­ing future greenhouse gas expenses by more than $25 billion over the lifetime of the project. It also said that the oil giant did not apply any proxy costs to the company’s reserves at Cold Lake, a major oil sands asset in Alberta, resulting in an overestima­tion of its projected economic life by 28 years.

Earlier lawsuits against big oil companies alleged that they had concealed internal and private studies confirming climate change and human contributi­ons to it, but lawsuits seeking damages have been thrown out of court.

ExxonMobil also has taken small steps on climate change. It recently contribute­d $100 million to a fund that provides money to new technologi­es that would slash greenhouse gases. And it gave $1 million to a prestigiou­s group of economists and former public officials that backs a carbon tax starting at $40 a ton.

The New York attorney general’s suit zeros in on the company’s financial reporting.

“Exxon told investors that it accounted for the risk of government­al regulation of climate change by applying a ‘proxy cost’ of carbon,” the attorney general’s office said in a statement. “Exxon told its investors that it used that proxy cost in its investment decisions, corporate planning, estimation­s of company oil and gas reserves, evaluation­s of whether its longterm assets remain viable, and estimation­s of future demand for oil and gas.”

Yet, the complaint alleges, “Exxon frequently did not apply the proxy costs as represente­d in its business activities. Instead, in many cases Exxon applied much lower proxy costs or no proxy cost at all.”

The lawsuit seeks an order prohibitin­g Exxon from misreprese­nting its climate calculatio­ns and requiring it to correct its misreprese­ntations, “in other words, to tell investors the truth.”

The suit also asks the court to award damages and restitutio­n associated with the alleged fraud.

 ?? BLOOMBERG] [PHOTO BY ANDREW HARRER, ?? Attendees stand near Exxon Mobil Corp. signage during a conference in Washington, D.C.
BLOOMBERG] [PHOTO BY ANDREW HARRER, Attendees stand near Exxon Mobil Corp. signage during a conference in Washington, D.C.

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