Toronto Star

U.S. ExxonMobil lawsuit takes aim at Alberta oilsands

Civil suit alleges company deliberate­ly lowballed carbon costs by $30 billion

- BOB WEBER

A lawsuit filed this week in a U.S. court says ExxonMobil has dramatical­ly underestim­ated the risks its oilsands assets face from efforts to reduce carbon emissions.

The lawsuit, filed after a threeyear investigat­ion by the New York attorney general’s office, charges that Exxon deliberate­ly lowballed by $30 billion the carbon costs faced by 14 different Alberta oilsands operations it runs through its subsidiary Imperial Oil.

“For one of these projects, an investment at Kearl (oilsands project near Fort McMurray), a 2015 economic forecast shows that the company understate­d projected ... costs of (greenhouse gas) emissions by as much as 94 per cent — approximat­ely $14 billion,” the lawsuit states.

The legal action is a civil suit arguing Exxon defrauded investors by disguising its carbon liabilitie­s. None of its statements has been proven in court and a statement of defence has not yet been filed. In a statement, Exxon said it will seek to have the lawsuit dismissed.

“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 three-year investigat­ion has uncovered no wrongdoing,” the firm said.

The lawsuit alleges Exxon has for years told investors it was accounting for risks such as increasing carbon taxes and other regulatory measures meant to reduce oil demand and fight climate change.

However, Exxon has proceeded using much lower estimates of such risks, called proxy costs, the claim says.

Exxon has also continued to count reserves as assets that are likely to become uneconomic as carbon prices rise, the lawsuit alleges.

It says Exxon told investors it was using a proxy cost of up to $80 a tonne by 2040 for countries such as Canada.

Meanwhile, management told employees not to apply the public proxy cost to projected emissions for planning and decision-making at oilsands projects in Alberta.

The attorney general quotes an Exxon planning supervisor, who noted in 2013 that the company based its decisions for Alberta’s Aspen mine on a carbon cost of $40 a tonne. The lawsuit alleges the company publicly said it was using a cost that reached $80 by 2040.

The lawsuit argues that after 2016, the company used proxy costs based on Alberta regulation­s existing at the time, which were closer to $5 a tonne. That cost was projected not to change indefinite­ly, despite the province’s current $30-a-tonne carbon tax. The difference be- tween the two figures adds up to $30 billion by 2040.

The lawsuit alleges Exxon also ignored the impact of carbon costs on the viability of its oilsands assets.

“In September 2015, an Imperial employee observed internally that applying the publicly represente­d proxy cost to evaluate company reserves at Cold Lake would ‘result in enough additional (operating expense) to shorten asset life and reduce gross reserves,’ ” says the lawsuit.

It claims the company’s analysis suggests applying the $80 standard that it was telling investors it was using would cut the economic life of Imperial’s Cold Lake facility by 28 years.

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