U.S. court rules Exxon must provide documents in climate investigation
Exxon Mobil must hand BOSTON over documents related to a state investigation into whether the company misled investors and consumers over what it knew about the link between fossil fuels and climate change, Massachusetts’ highest court ruled Friday.
The Supreme Judicial Court rejected Exxon Mobil’s attempt to stymie Attorney General Maura Healey’s probe into whether it concealed information about the impact of climate change from the public. “Now Exxon must come forward with the truth, what it knew about climate change, when, and what it told the world,” the Democratic attorney general said in a statement. “The people of Massachusetts — and people everywhere — deserve answers.”
An Exxon spokesman said the firm is evaluating the court’s ruling and considering its next steps.
The ruling is the second blow to the Irving, Texas-based oil and gas giant in the last month. A federal judge in March dismissed the company’s lawsuit that aimed at stopping Healey’s investigation and a similar probe that’s being conducted by New York Attorney General Eric Schneiderman. The judge in that case described Exxon’s lawsuit as “running roughshod over the adage that the best defence is a good offence.”
The company has said that the two attorneys general “are incapable of impartial investigations and are attempting to silence political opponents who disagree on the appropriate policies to address climate change.”