friends of the earth international
press release
29 january 2004
EXXONMOBIL'S HISTORIC CONTRIBUTION TO
CLIMATE CHANGE ASSESSED FOR THE FIRST
TIME
read the report
London (UK) / Washington DC (USA) January
29, 2004 (EMBARGO)-- A landmark report
released today reveals that, over the past
120 years, the operations and burning of
products of oil giant Exxon Mobil [1] and its
predecessors (since the foundation of the
Standard Oil Trust in 1882), have caused
between 4.7 and 5.3% of all man-made carbon
dioxide emissions across the globe.
The figures were unveiled as Exxon
[NYSE:XOM] releases its annual results today
and show that the company's total carbon
dioxide emissions in the past 120 years, at
20.3 billion tonnes, have been about three
times the current annual global emissions
from fossil fuels (and about 13 times the
annual US emissions).
The new report "Exxon's Climate Footprint"
is based on two groundbreaking studies
carried out by independent experts and
commissioned by Friends of the Earth. [2]
This is the first time a company's
historic contribution to global climate
change has ever been calculated and could
prove vital in paving the way for
compensation claims against companies by
victims of global warming caused by man-made
pollution.
Carbon dioxide emissions are the principal
cause of global warming and the report shows
that most of the years when ExxonMobil's
emissions have been highest were after 1996,
the year when United Nations scientists
concluded that man-made pollution had a
discernible effect on the global climate
[3].
Around 70% of the company's emissions have
been since 1967, when scientists produced
"the first reasonably solid evidence" that
global warming could really happen. [4].
Climate change has started and its
predicted impacts are huge. Worldwide,
hundreds of millions of people could lose
their lives or livelihoods because of
changing rainfall patterns and more severe
storms. Impacts of climate change in Exxon's
home state of Texas could include lower
agricultural yields, loss of land, and more
frequent flooding along the US Gulf
coast.
The research was carried out by
independent experts in the US and New Zealand
and involved adding up data on fuel used and
sold, calculating the emissions generated and
feeding the results into an
internationally-recognised computer model.
The research, based on data Exxon published
in its annual reports, and on other sources,
also shows the impact Exxon-related emissions
have had on global temperatures and the rise
in sea level.
ExxonMobil was chosen as the first company
for such an assessment because it has
repeatedly attempted to undermine the
scientific consensus on climate change and
actively resisted attempts to limit carbon
dioxide emissions.
Tony Juniper, Vice-chair of Friends of the
Earth International said:
"This report should send shivers through
the boardrooms of oil companies all over the
world. For the first time, the historic
effect of one company, ExxonMobil, on climate
change has been identified and its products'
impacts assessed. We hope this assessment
will bring forward the day when the victims
of climate change can take legal action
against ExxonMobil for the damage its
activities have caused and will cause in the
future. Exxon shareholders should warn the
company that the stance it is taking on
global warming is leaving it vulnerable to
legal action and require an assessment of
their exposure. Other companies that have
contributed to climate change would also be
well-advised to consider whether they face
similar risks."
Jon Sohn, Senior Policy Analyst at Friends
of the Earth US said: "ExxonMobil is sticking
its head in the sand just like tobacco
companies that knew the harmful impacts of
their product and ultimately paid the price.
ExxonMobil's greenhouse gas contribution is
staggering and shareholders can vote for
resolutions that force the corporation to
take action now."
For more information, contact Friends of
the Earth climate change experts:
In the USA:
Jon Sohn, Sr. Policy Analyst at
+1-202-222-0717 (office) or +1-202-412-2467
(mobile)
In the UK:
Tony Juniper, Vice-President of Friends of
the Earth International, at + 44 207 566 1649
(office) or: +44 (0)7712 843207 (mobile)
OR
Lawyer Peter Roderick at +44 207-388 3141
(office) from the Climate Justice Programme
[5] who can discuss the legal implications of
the studies.
Notes for Editors
[1] ExxonMobil trades as Esso, Mobil,
Imperial Oil, Tonen General and Exxon in
different countries.
[2] The report is based on two
groundbreaking studies carried out by
independent experts and commissioned by
Friends of the Earth:
a) Heede R. "ExxonMobil Corporation
emissions inventory 1882-2002: Methods and
Results, plus associated spreadsheets",
Climate Mitigation Services, Snowmass,
Colorado. Dec 2003. This study estimated the
carbon dioxide and methane emissions from
ExxonMobil's operations and the burning of
its products.
b) Salinger J. and Bodeker G. "Assessing
the effects of CO2, CH4 and N2O emissions on
atmospheric concentrations, changes in
radiative forcing, changes in global mean
surface temperature, and changes in sea
level: a case study", National Institute of
Water & Atmospheric Research Ltd. Dec
2003. This study uses the results of the
previous study to run a well-known climate
model to calculate the contribution these
emissions have made, and will make, to
atmospheric concentrations of these gases, to
increases in global average surface
temperature and to sea-level rise.
These studies and associated documents are
available on request and will be available at
www.exxonclimatefootprint.com
from 02:00 GMT on 29 January 2004 (21:00 ET
28 Jan 2004 for the USA)
[3] In 1996, the IPCC reviewed the
scientific evidence on the impact of man-made
pollution on the world's climate and
concluded that "the balance of evidence
suggests a discernible human influence on
global climate" [IPCC (1996) "Climate
Change1995: the Science of Climate Change" p.
4]
[4] In 1967, Manabe & Wetherald made a
convincing calculation that doubling CO2
would raise world temperatures a couple of
degrees. See the American Institute of
Physics' The Discovery of Global Warming:
Timeline of Milestones, available at
http://www.aip.org/history/climate/Radmath.htm#L_M035.
The Institute states that "In the view of
many experts, this widely noted calculation
(to be precise: the Manabe-Wetherald
one-dimensional radiative-convective model)
gave the first reasonably solid evidence that
greenhouse warming really could happen."
[5] The international and collaborative
Climate Justice Programme supports and
encourages the enforcement of the law to
combat climate change and associated human
rights violations. See
http://www.climatelaw.org. The Climate
Justice Programme was a partner in managing
the two studies.
Background note on Climate change:
Climate change is caused by a build-up of
man-made pollution that traps some of the
light reflecting off the Earth's surface -
heating up the atmosphere and changing
weather patterns. The main gases involved
include carbon dioxide, methane and nitrous
oxide.
Burning fossil fuels is by far the biggest
contributor to this problem.
The United Nations has set up an
independent, international committee of
experts called the Intergovernmental Panel on
Climate Change (IPCC).
The IPCC says global average surface
temperatures rose by about 0.6°C during the
last century [IPCC (2001) "Climate change:
the scientific basis" p2].
In 2001, it said that most of the warming
observed over the last 50 years was due to
human activities [p10]. The IPCC also says
the poorest people in the poorest countries
in the world are likely to suffer most from
climate change [IPCC (2001) "Climate change:
impacts, adaptation and vulnerability"
p.8].
|