Revealed: Exxon made ‘breathtakingly’ accurate
climate predictions in 1970s and 80s
Oil company drove some of the leading science of the
era only to publicly dismiss global heating
Oliver
Milman in New York
@olliemilman
Thu 12 Jan
2023 14.00 EST
https://www.theguardian.com/business/2023/jan/12/exxon-climate-change-global-warming-research
The oil
giant Exxon privately “predicted global warming correctly and skilfully” only
to then spend decades publicly rubbishing such science in order to protect its
core business, new research has found.
A trove of
internal documents and research papers has previously established that Exxon
knew of the dangers of global heating from at least the 1970s, with other oil
industry bodies knowing of the risk even earlier, from around the 1950s. They
forcefully and successfully mobilized against the science to stymie any action
to reduce fossil fuel use.
A new
study, however, has made clear that Exxon’s scientists were uncannily accurate
in their projections from the 1970s onwards, predicting an upward curve of
global temperatures and carbon dioxide emissions that is close to matching what
actually occurred as the world heated up at a pace not seen in millions of
years.
Exxon
scientists predicted there would be global heating of about 0.2C a decade due
to the emissions of planet-heating gases from the burning of oil, coal and
other fossil fuels. The new analysis, published in Science, finds that Exxon’s
science was highly adept and the “projections were also consistent with, and at
least as skillful as, those of independent academic and government models”.
Geoffrey
Supran, whose previous research of historical industry documents helped shed
light on what Exxon and other oil firms knew, said it was “breathtaking” to see
Exxon’s projections line up so closely with what subsequently happened.
“This
really does sum up what Exxon knew, years before many of us were born,” said
Supran, who led the analysis conducted by researchers from Harvard University
and the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research. “We now have the smoking
gun showing that they accurately predicted warming years before they started
attacking the science. These graphs confirm the complicity of what Exxon knew
and how they misled.”
The
research analyzed more than 100 internal documents and peer-reviewed scientific
publications either produced in-house by Exxon scientists and managers, or
co-authored by Exxon scientists in independent publications between 1977 and
2014.
The
analysis found that Exxon correctly rejected the idea the world was headed for
an imminent ice age, which was a possibility mooted in the 1970s, instead
predicting that the planet was facing a “carbon dioxide induced
‘super-interglacial’”. Company scientists also found that global heating was
human-influenced and would be detected around the year 2000, and they predicted
the “carbon budget” for holding the warming below 2C above pre-industrial
times.
Armed with
this knowledge, Exxon embarked upon a lengthy campaign to downplay or discredit
what its own scientists had confirmed. As recently as 2013, Rex Tillerson, then
chief executive of the oil company, said that the climate models were “not
competent” and that “there are uncertainties” over the impact of burning fossil
fuels.
“What they
did was essentially remain silent while doing this work and only when it became
strategically necessary to manage the existential threat to their business did
they stand up and speak out against the science,” said Supran.
“They could
have endorsed their science rather than deny it. It would have been a much
harder case to deny it if the king of big oil was actually backing the science
rather than attacking it.”
Climate
scientists said the new study highlighted an important chapter in the struggle
to address the climate crisis. “It is very unfortunate that the company not
only did not heed the implied risks from this information, but rather chose to
endorse non-scientific ideas instead to delay action, likely in an effort to
make more money,” said Natalie Mahowald, a climate scientist at Cornell
University.
Mahowald
said the delays in action aided by Exxon had “profound implications” because
earlier investments in wind and solar could have averted current and future
climate disasters. “If we include impacts from air pollution and climate
change, their actions likely impacted thousands to millions of people
adversely,” she added.
Drew
Shindell, a climate scientist at Duke University, said the new study was a
“detailed, robust analysis” and that Exxon’s misleading public comments about
the climate crisis were “especially brazen” given their scientists’ involvement
in work with outside researchers in assessing global heating. Shindell said it
was hard to conclude that Exxon’s scientists were any better at this than
outside scientists, however.
The new
work provided “further amplification” of Exxon’s misinformation, said Robert
Brulle, an environment policy expert at Brown University who has researched
climate disinformation spread by the fossil fuel industry.
“I’m sure
that the ongoing efforts to hold Exxon accountable will take note of this
study,” Brulle said, a reference to the various lawsuits aimed at getting oil
companies to pay for climate damages.
A
spokesperson for Exxon said: “This issue has come up several times in recent
years and, in each case, our answer is the same: those who talk about how
“Exxon Knew” are wrong in their conclusions. In 2019, Judge Barry Ostrager of
the NY State Supreme Court listened to all the facts in a related case before
him and wrote: “What the evidence at trial revealed is that ExxonMobil
executives and employees were uniformly committed to rigorously discharging
their duties in the most comprehensive and meticulous manner possible….The
testimony of these witnesses demonstrated that ExxonMobil has a culture of
disciplined analysis, planning, accounting, and reporting.”

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