Edmonton Journal

Lawsuit alleges Exxon misled its investors on climate change risks

- BOB WEBER

Alberta’s oilsands are at the centre of a court battle in New York this week that legal experts say could affect future climate lawsuits in Canada.

“The evidence that’s coming out through this case is absolutely relevant to other lawsuits,” said Martin Olszynski, a University of Calgary professor who teaches environmen­tal law.

New York’s attorney general is accusing Exxon Mobil of misreprese­nting the risks oilsands operations face as government­s move to fight climate change.

In the case filed a year ago, the state claims Exxon told investors that it was evaluating projects based on a carbon price that was much higher than the one used in calculatio­ns. That led investors to believe they faced a lower risk and also inflated evaluation­s of Exxon’s oil reserves.

Exxon has tried twice to block the case.

The company’s lawyer, calling the accusation­s bizarre and twisted, argued Tuesday that Exxon did nothing wrong.

Although the lawsuit deals with a wide array of the multinatio­nal’s operations, the oilsands feature prominentl­y as Exxon is a major player through its subsidiary Imperial Oil.

“In these parts of its business, Exxon often applied a much lower price per ton to a small percentage of its (greenhouse gas) emissions ... and held those lower costs flat far into the future,” court documents say.

“Exxon in effect ... create(d) the illusion that it had fully considered the risks of future climate change regulation and had factored those risks into its business operations ... The company was exposed to far greater risk from climate change regulation­s than investors were led to believe.”

The documents allege Exxon lowballed by $30 billion the impact of carbon pricing on 14 Alberta oilsands projects. They claim carbon costs at the Kearl project in northern Alberta were understate­d by 94 per cent.

The documents also allege that low carbon cost estimates falsely extended the economic life of some assets.

It claims the life of Imperial Oil’s facility in Cold Lake would be 28 years shorter if assigned a true carbon price.

Exxon says the lawsuit fails to consider the different ways the company accounted for increasing­ly strict climate regulation­s.

Its lawyer says one method tries to predict how climate regulation­s may affect oil and gas demand while another measures how local regulators may tax emissions.

Imperial Oil declined to comment.

David Estrin, a Toronto lawyer who specialize­s in environmen­tal law, said evidence emerging from the trial is likely to surface in future climate lawsuits in Canada. He predicts government­s will be forced to eventually sue fossil fuel producers for damage caused by climate change.

“Government­s at some level in Canada will certainly go after the carbon majors,” Estrin said.

“With the kind of informatio­n that New York state is bringing out, that would allow suits to be brought on the basis of negligence. It’s an aggravatin­g factor.”

Several municipali­ties are actively considerin­g lawsuits against fossil fuel companies, he said.

Olszynski said Canadian lawyers involved in those efforts are likely to be closely watching the evidence being considered in New York and the case, if upheld, may encourage Canadian litigation.

“Some of the informatio­n that’s going to come out in the context of this (New York) lawsuit will inevitably inform the court of public opinion whether or not there is merit behind these lawsuits.”

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