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Investigation Finds Exxon Ignored Its Own Early Climate Change Warnings 255

New submitter jrmcferren writes: PBS Reports the Exxon ignored their own internal climate change warnings. Newly discovered documents show that the corporation's own research scientists warned top executives that atmospheric CO2 was increasing and that the burning of fossil fuels was to blame as early as 1977. The report goes on to say: "In 1978, the Exxon researchers warned that a doubling of CO2 levels in the atmosphere would increase average global temperatures by 2 to 3 degrees Celsius and would have a major impact on the company’s core business. 'Present thinking holds that man has a time window of five to ten years before the need for hard decisions regarding changes in energy strategies might become critical,' one scientist wrote in an internal document."
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Investigation Finds Exxon Ignored Its Own Early Climate Change Warnings

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  • by turkeydance ( 1266624 ) on Friday September 18, 2015 @08:23AM (#50548097)
    cold hard cash
    • No, people filling up their tanks made the decision for them.

      Exxon could have stopped refining oil and nothing in the world would have changed.

      • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

        by FranTaylor ( 164577 )

        No, people filling up their tanks made the decision for them.

        Exxon could have stopped refining oil and nothing in the world would have changed.

        yeah, if they had gone into the solar panel business, we could be selling solar panels to china, but no.

        • How many solar panels does BP sell in China?

          Before making an assertion, you should check if other companies did what you suggest and look at what actually happened.

        • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

          by thegarbz ( 1787294 )

          MOST oil companies tried to go the solar route. At one point BP was the largest solar panel manufacturer in the world.
          Also you fail at history. Exxon bankrolled Solar Power Corporation back in the 70s. Eventually that was sold to Royal Dutch Shell, and then divested out of the oil industry in 2006.

          Most of the western oil companies had some stake in renewable energies. Solar particularly they all got their asses handed to them and divested in the last 10 years.

          As a side note, I think you have an ignorant sol

      • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

        by Layzej ( 1976930 )
        I think the issue is that internally they knew that their product would cause global warming, but at the same time were funding think tanks to push the message that their product would not cause global warming.
      • by localman ( 111171 ) on Friday September 18, 2015 @11:19AM (#50549229) Homepage

        Ah yes, the old "had to do it for the money" claim. If we accept that everyone is an idiot robot that will play Russian Roulette for a dollar, sure. But the fact is that a person or organization has the power to make a decision with short-term or long-term thinking in mind, or a decision with self-interest or social awareness in mind. Yet somehow we've got to the point where we'll excuse absolutely anything as being reasonable if there was money at stake. Personally, I'd prefer we hold ourselves to a slightly higher standard, but I realize I'm shouting into the wind.

  • No suprise (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Martin Spamer ( 244245 ) on Friday September 18, 2015 @08:24AM (#50548107) Homepage Journal

    Why should it be surprising that a vested interest ignored the evidence at the time, when we see the same denial today when faced with overwhelming evidence?

  • by Anonymous Coward

    Another similarity; both oil and tobacco industry have huge PR and lobby efforts to continue misleading and confuse the topic and as much as possible avoid that anything is done about it.

  • Versus doing what? (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Kohath ( 38547 ) on Friday September 18, 2015 @08:58AM (#50548259)

    What were they supposed to do to not be accused of "ignoring" warnings? Can you describe the decision-making process you wish they'd followed?

    It's the same for the rest of us as it is for Exxon -- just less existential. We've been "warned". Yet we go on with our lives. The warnings get louder and more shrill and catastrophic and angry. And we still go on with our lives. Eventually this should stop being a big surprise.

    • by FranTaylor ( 164577 ) on Friday September 18, 2015 @09:21AM (#50548403)

      What were they supposed to do to not be accused of "ignoring" warnings? Can you describe the decision-making process you wish they'd followed?

      They are an energy company, not an oil company. Just imagine if they had invested heavily in solar technology. All that money we are paying to the Chinese for solar panels, we could be paying it to them instead. BUT NO.

      • by Kohath ( 38547 )

        Would people buy solar panels made by Exxon? Why would anyone expect Exxon would be good at making solar panels? Why would an Exxon executive think Exxon would be good at making solar panels?

        When you tell yourself a story about Exxon making solar panels, does it seem like a believable story?

        • Would people buy solar panels made by Exxon? Why would anyone expect Exxon would be good at making solar panels? Why would an Exxon executive think Exxon would be good at making solar panels?

          When you tell yourself a story about Exxon making solar panels, does it seem like a believable story?

          Shell, Arco, and BP are all making and selling solar panels, why not?

          • by Kohath ( 38547 )

            Shell, Arco, and BP are all making and selling solar panels, why not?

            So if they sold as many solar panels as Shell, Arco, or BP, they'd be immune to criticism? It seems like environmentalists still complain about Shell, Arco, and BP.

    • What were they supposed to do to not be accused of "ignoring" warnings?

      In fact, the report advised a wait-and-see attitude based on all available scientific data. So, it's not that they ignored the advice of their scientists, they actually followed it.

      The warnings get louder and more shrill and catastrophic and angry.

      The scientific situation hasn't changed much in the last 30 years. (1) The planet is getting warmer (mainly at the poles). (2) That will lead to changes in climate, redistribution of arable lan

      • There is little reason to believe that massive government intervention at this point is would be either beneficial or effective in the long run, and it would certainly be quite harmful in the short run.

        I know, right? the government made an effort to save lives on the road, and over the decades it's only saved about a million lives, really just nothing at all.

        • I know, right? the government made an effort to save lives on the road, and over the decades it's only saved about a million lives, really just nothing at all.

          So you are saying that because some government regulations are useful, people should unquestioningly accept all government regulations, no matter what? Or what exactly is your point?

  • they have a vested interest in ignoring it

    that's what you need *regulations* for

    you know, evil, evil job destroying regulations. because a guy having a job on an oil field is more important than his grandkid able to grow food crops

    what's that? companies write their own regulations through congresscritters?

    yes, that's called *regulatory capture*

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]

    in which case you clean up your government, remove the corruption. which is unfortunately legal in the usa. so you vote for the guys who are actually going to do something about that rather than the professional prostitutes who talk about tax cuts for "job creators" (aka, their rich friends who park their money in an offshore banking accounts, rather than a tax cut for the middle class and poor, who immediately spend their cash, actually growing the economy)

  • by Eunuchswear ( 210685 ) on Friday September 18, 2015 @10:07AM (#50548773) Journal

    Exxon didn't "Ignore Its Own Early Climate Change Warnings". It, knowing that AGW was real, defunded the research that proved it and paid professional science deniers to spread FUD claiming that AGW didn't exist.

  • by NostalgiaForInfinity ( 4001831 ) on Friday September 18, 2015 @10:29AM (#50548911)

    Instead of the biased article, read what the report actually concludes:

    Overall, the current outlook suggests potentially serious climate problems are not likely to occur until the late 21st century or perhaps beyond at projected energy demand rates. This should provide time to resolve uncertainties regarding the overall carbon cycle and the contribution of fossil fuel combustion as well as the role of the oceans as a reservoir for both heat and carbon dioxide. [...] Making significant changes in energy consumption patterns now to deal with this potential problem amid all the scientific uncertainties would be premature in view of the severe impact such moves could have on the world's economies and societies.

    http://insideclimatenews.org/s... [insideclimatenews.org]

    The report also points out that temperature increases would not be uniform, with strong increase at the polar caps and little increase near the equator.

    The interesting thing is that little has changed about these conclusions in the last 30 years; science has produced a lot of new data, but the conclusions have changed little.

    • Instead of the biased article, read what the report actually concludes:

      Overall, the current outlook suggests potentially serious climate problems are not likely to occur until the late 21st century or perhaps beyond at projected energy demand rates. This should provide time to resolve uncertainties regarding the overall carbon cycle and the contribution of fossil fuel combustion as well as the role of the oceans as a reservoir for both heat and carbon dioxide. [...] Making significant changes in energy consumption patterns now to deal with this potential problem amid all the scientific uncertainties would be premature in view of the severe impact such moves could have on the world's economies and societies.

      http://insideclimatenews.org/s... [insideclimatenews.org]

      The report also points out that temperature increases would not be uniform, with strong increase at the polar caps and little increase near the equator.

      The interesting thing is that little has changed about these conclusions in the last 30 years; science has produced a lot of new data, but the conclusions have changed little.

      38 years.

      And things have changed, the later 21st century is 38 years closer, the uncertainties a lot smaller, and alternative sources of energy a lot more mature.

      But it is somewhat surprising how close the projections were at that time.

      • And things have changed, the later 21st century is 38 years closer, the uncertainties a lot smaller

        Things have changed, but the conclusions haven't: the temperature predictions are still pretty much the same, their consequences are still as much guesswork now as back then, and the cost of intervention is much higher now; on balance, government should still not intervene.

        and alternative sources of energy a lot more mature.

        And the best strategy is to focus on economic growth so that they will soon become actu

  • by theendlessnow ( 516149 ) * on Friday September 18, 2015 @11:26AM (#50549297)
    Let's say that coffee and tea cause global warming (climate change). In other words, let's make the "evil" bit more personal. Are you ready to give up coffee and tea?

    Sometimes we have a better understanding of things when we make it a bit more personal...

    Now... do you need coffee and tea more than you need electricity? more than you need manufactured goods? If you believe the answer to be "no", then this just became even more personal.

    Sure, we could force all countries to have military rule and force all fossil and nuclear fuels to "end" business and switch to very very expensive alternatives. We could do that I suppose. But I think it would have to be done by force. The general populace won't give up tea and coffee easily.

    With that said, a lot of these "evil" companies hedge their bets and spend a lot of money researching alternative sources just in case they are forced to change.

    Now... the pain of switching, if done over a very long period of time... it's quite possible we would be ok with regards to our personal lifestyles (indeed, not talking about readers here, but the truth is, there has been some change already, just maybe not enough at a fast enough pace). However, since the "evil" potential is still out there, then the truly evil (not the current oil, gas, coal and nuclear companies) could exploit those technologies and possibly cause problems.... just saying...

    With that said, if we can turn an alternative into a viable cheap and reliable solution that is economically better than oil, gas, coal and nuclear, then those big companies will change very very quickly. No sense being stuck in the past doing something more expensive.

    Best solution happens at the consumer/people level. If "we" stop using "evil" energy. If "we" stop using the "evil". If we stop drinking coffee and tea... they (the evil companies) are forced to change. Are you ready? Currently the answer is a very clear "no".

    Stuff to ponder...
    • by Ichijo ( 607641 )

      If everyone had to pay an extra $5 per cup of coffee, and if all that extra revenue were redistributed equally to everyone (even those who don't drink coffee), then I think we would collectively drink a lot less coffee, and nobody except the heaviest coffee drinkers would be worse financially. Poor people who don't drink coffee would benefit the most in proportion to their income.

      Would people go for a revenue-neutral coffee tax where everyone gets free money?

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