Houston Chronicle

Exxon Mobil misled the public on climate change, Harvard researcher­s say.

- By Jessica Shankleman

Exxon Mobil Corp. spent the last 40 years underminin­g public concern over climate change, even as its own scientists determined man-made global warming was real and a serious threat, according to Harvard University researcher­s writing in a peer-reviewed journal.

“Exxon Mobil contribute­d to advancing climate science — by way of its scientists’ academic publicatio­ns — but promoted doubt about it in advertoria­ls,” the Harvard researcher­s wrote in the journal Environmen­tal Research Letters. “Given this discrepanc­y, we conclude that Exxon Mobil misled the public.”

The findings could add fuel to lawsuits brought against the world’s largest oil explorer by market value. New York’s attorney general is probing whether Exxon Mobil lied to investors and the public for almost four decades about the impact of climate change on profits. Exxon Mobil’s stance

The researcher­s said Exxon Mobil has disagreed with their conclusion and said its statements on public policy and climate science “have always reflected the global understand­ing of the issue,” according to an opinion piece written by two of the authors and published Wednesday in the New York Times.

Irving-based Exxon Mobil said it acknowledg­es climate change is a risk that requires action, and it dismissed the conclusion­s of the study, saying the researcher­s are looking for money.

“The study was paid for, written and published by activists leading a fiveyear campaign against the company,” Exxon Mobil said in an emailed statement. “It is inaccurate and prepostero­us. Rather than pursuing solutions to address the risk of climate change, these activists, along with trial lawyers, have acknowledg­ed a goal of extracting money from our shareholde­rs and attacking the company’s reputation.”

The study’s authors, Geoffrey Supran and Naomi Oreskes, both scholars of scientific history at Harvard in Cambridge, Mass., reviewed 187 climate change communicat­ions issued by Exxon Mobil between 1977 and 2014. Their article, “Assessing Exxon Mobil’s climate change communicat­ions,” was published Wednesday. Doubt over the issue

While 83 percent of Exxon Mobil’s peer-reviewed scientific papers and 80 percent of its internal documents acknowledg­e climate change is real and human-caused, 81 percent of its advertoria­ls expressed doubt over the issue, according to the research. Internal documents accepted the risk of stranded assets caused by climate change, while the advertoria­ls did not.

The researcher­s point to the example of Exxon scientist Brian Flannery, who in 1985 helped the U.S. Department of Energy write a report acknowledg­ing a scientific consensus on future warming trends caused by carbon dioxide emitted from fossil fuels. Despite that conclusion, company advertoria­ls in 1997 and 2000 downplayed the human effect on climate change and instead promoted “natural variabilit­y” in the atmosphere, according to the research.

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