Current:Home > InvestHarvard Study Finds Exxon Misled Public about Climate Change -WealthTrack
Harvard Study Finds Exxon Misled Public about Climate Change
Algosensey Quantitative Think Tank Center View
Date:2025-04-08 10:38:43
Stay informed about the latest climate, energy and environmental justice news by email. Sign up for the ICN newsletter.
A comprehensive, peer-reviewed academic study of ExxonMobil’s internal deliberations, scientific research and public rhetoric over the decades has confirmed empirically that the oil giant misled the public about what it knew about climate change and the risks posed by fossil fuel emissions, the authors said on Tuesday.
The paper confirms the findings of a 2015 investigative series by InsideClimate News that was based largely on the company’s internal records, and also of independent work published by the Los Angeles Times. That reporting ignited investigations by state attorneys general that are still in litigation.
“On the question of whether ExxonMobil misled non-scientific audiences about climate science, our analysis supports the conclusion that it did,” Geoffrey Supran and Naomi Oreskes of Harvard University wrote in the study, published today in the scientific journal Environmental Research Letters.
Across the board, the paper found “a systematic discrepancy between what ExxonMobil’s scientists and executives discussed about climate change privately and in academic circles and what it presented to the general public,” the authors said.
“ExxonMobil contributed quietly to the science and loudly to raising doubts about it,” they wrote.
The authors explicitly rejected Exxon’s main defense, which was to claim that journalists were “cherry picking” the company’s record and that its positions had always been in step with the state of the science. The company often said that anyone who read the full documentary record would see matters Exxon’s way.
The Harvard researchers said their task was to accept Exxon’s challenge to review the full record. Among the documents they examined were dozens cited in ICN’s work, as well as more than 50 scientific papers Exxon frequently mentioned in its own defense and its issue advertising.
Supran and Oreskes called their conclusions “an expansive, quantitative, independent corroboration of the findings of investigative journalists.”
In an interview, Supran said the evidence was unambiguous.
The authors reviewed 187 public and internal Exxon documents over the past four decades, including many that were brought to light by ICN’s reporting.
In one finding, they judged that 83 percent of peer-reviewed papers written by company scientists and 80 percent of the company’s internal communications acknowledged that climate change is real and caused by humans. But among Exxon’s advertisements on the editorial pages of The New York Times, a proxy for communications aimed at a broad public audience, only 12 percent acknowledged climate change as real and human-caused, while 81 percent expressed doubt.
Among the documents examined were scientific papers, internal company memos, and paid editorial-style advertisements in The New York Times. The documents were scored by reviewers in a standard social-science approach known as content analysis, with an aim of evaluating their viewpoints on climate change and quantifying the consistency of Exxon’s communications.
Reviewers looked at the company’s views of climate change as real, human-caused, serious and solvable.
They also examined a key point that has come up in recent years: whether the company faces a financial risk of stranded assets as policy makers shift world economies away from fossil fuels because their emissions cause global warming.
Their work was supported by Harvard University Faculty Development Funds and by the Rockefeller Family Fund, which has also supported InsideClimate News.
ICN’s series in 2015, Exxon: The Road Not Taken, won an array of journalism prizes and was a finalist for the 2016 Pulitzer Prize for Public Service. It described how Exxon conducted cutting-edge climate research decades ago and how the company then pivoted to the forefront of climate denial, manufacturing doubt about the climate consensus and the dangers that its own scientists had confirmed.
In an interview, Supran said that the company’s “pattern of discrepant, misleading climate communication” seems still pertinent today, even though the documents analyzed here dated back many years.
It’s not just the dissonance he sees between Exxon’s more recent formal endorsement of a carbon tax and the refusal of almost anyone the company supports in Congress to embrace that kind of climate solution.
“The company’s apparent acknowledgement of climate science and its implications,” he said, “seems dramatically at odds with basically its current business practice.”
Supran cited Exxon’s push, thwarted by sanctions so far, to drill in Siberia along with the Russian company Rosneft, even though “that oil and gas resource, the largest untapped oil and gas resource left in the entire world, is quantifiably incompatible with holding warming below 2 degrees,” the internationally accepted goal.
“In terms of the company’s rhetoric and business practices,” he concluded, “there is a pattern of discrepancy between what the company says and what the company does.”
Exxon, which did not have access in advance to the full paper under terms of a news embargo imposed by the journal publishing it, did not respond to emails on Tuesday requesting comment.
veryGood! (9)
Related
- Krispy Kreme offers a free dozen Grinch green doughnuts: When to get the deal
- Soccer star Achraf Hakimi urges Moroccans to ‘help each other’ after earthquake
- Authorities search for grizzly bear that mauled a Montana hunter
- Most of West Maui will welcome back visitors next month under a new wildfire emergency proclamation
- New Mexico governor seeks funding to recycle fracking water, expand preschool, treat mental health
- Authorities search for grizzly bear that mauled a Montana hunter
- Exclusive: 25 years later, Mark McGwire still gets emotional reliving 1998 Home Run Chase
- What's causing massive seabird die-offs? Warming oceans part of ecosystem challenges
- South Korean president's party divided over defiant martial law speech
- Separatist parliament in Azerbaijan’s breakaway Nagorno-Karabakh region elects new president
Ranking
- Rylee Arnold Shares a Long
- Two and a Half Men’s Angus T. Jones Looks Unrecognizable Debuting Shaved Head
- ‘The world knows us.’ South Sudanese cheer their basketball team’s rise and Olympic qualification
- Kim Jong Un hosts Chinese and Russian guests at a parade celebrating North Korea’s 75th anniversary
- Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
- Pelosi announces she'll run for another term in Congress as Democrats seek to retake House
- Justice Dept and abortion pill manufacturer ask Supreme Court to hear case on mifepristone access
- Maui mayor dismisses criticism of fire response, touts community's solidarity
Recommendation
Meet first time Grammy nominee Charley Crockett
Jimmy Buffett's new music isn't over yet: 3 songs out now, album due in November
Why we love Bards Alley Bookshop: 'Curated literature and whimsical expressions of life'
IRS targets 1,600 millionaires who owe at least $250,000
San Francisco names street for Associated Press photographer who captured the iconic Iwo Jima photo
Two and a Half Men’s Angus T. Jones Looks Unrecognizable Debuting Shaved Head
Who says money can’t buy happiness? Here’s how much it costs (really) in different cities
As the Colorado River Declines, Some Upstream Look to Use it Before They Lose it