Exxon's Plan For Surging Carbon Emissions Revealed In Leaked Documents 67
An anonymous reader quotes a report from Bloomberg: Exxon Mobil has been planning to increase annual carbon-dioxide emissions by as much as the output of the entire nation of Greece, an analysis of internal documents reviewed by Bloomberg shows, setting one of the largest corporate emitters against international efforts to slow the pace of warming. The drive to expand both fossil-fuel production and planet-warming pollution comes at a time when some of Exxon's rivals, such as BP Plc and Royal Dutch Shell Plc, are moving to curb oil and zero-out emissions. Exxon's own assessment of its $210 billion investment strategy shows yearly emissions rising 17% by 2025, according to the internal documents.
The largest U.S. oil producer has never made a commitment to lower oil and gas output or set a date by which it will become carbon neutral, and its near-term plans have been disrupted by fallout from the Covid-19 pandemic. Exxon has also never publicly disclosed its forecasts for its own emissions. But the planning documents show for the first time that Exxon has carefully assessed the direct emissions it expects from the seven-year investment plan adopted in 2018 by Chief Executive Officer Darren Woods. The additional 21 million metric tons of carbon dioxide per year that would result from ramping up production dwarfs Exxon's projections for its own efforts to reduce pollution, such as deploying renewable energy and burying some carbon dioxide. The report notes that these internal estimates "reflect only a small portion of Exxon's total contribution to climate change," and don't take into account emissions "from customers burning fuel in vehicles or other end uses."
"That means the full climate impact of Exxon's growth strategy could likely be five times the company's estimate -- or about 100 million tons of additional carbon dioxide -- had the company accounted for so-called Scope 3 emissions. If its plans are realized, Exxon would add to the atmosphere the annual emissions of a small, developed nation, or 26 coal-fired power plants."
The largest U.S. oil producer has never made a commitment to lower oil and gas output or set a date by which it will become carbon neutral, and its near-term plans have been disrupted by fallout from the Covid-19 pandemic. Exxon has also never publicly disclosed its forecasts for its own emissions. But the planning documents show for the first time that Exxon has carefully assessed the direct emissions it expects from the seven-year investment plan adopted in 2018 by Chief Executive Officer Darren Woods. The additional 21 million metric tons of carbon dioxide per year that would result from ramping up production dwarfs Exxon's projections for its own efforts to reduce pollution, such as deploying renewable energy and burying some carbon dioxide. The report notes that these internal estimates "reflect only a small portion of Exxon's total contribution to climate change," and don't take into account emissions "from customers burning fuel in vehicles or other end uses."
"That means the full climate impact of Exxon's growth strategy could likely be five times the company's estimate -- or about 100 million tons of additional carbon dioxide -- had the company accounted for so-called Scope 3 emissions. If its plans are realized, Exxon would add to the atmosphere the annual emissions of a small, developed nation, or 26 coal-fired power plants."
I'm shocked (Score:5, Insightful)
Actually, no I'm not. Exxon is evil.
Did anyone not know this?
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I always knew they were categorically evil, but I had previously scoffed at allegations that they had ancient ties to a apocalyptic death cult.
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Interesting. So, references to Exxon's secret motives being tied to cult activity gets the astroturfing treatment? Very interesting, indeed! I know you guys are all about saying a lot without saying anything at all, but I think sometimes you really leave a lot more information "between the lines" than you intend.
Re: I'm shocked; Anglo-Saxons FIRST! (Score:2)
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I always knew they were categorically evil, but I had previously scoffed at allegations that they had ancient ties to a apocalyptic death cult.
Worship of the Sumerian god Enk'son isn't strictly speaking a death cult, they merely believe in the recreation of the world in a new form. The fact that most of it will be uninhabitable isn't mentioned on any clay tablets, but a lot has been lost over the years.
(The annex to the apocrypha to the Epic of Gilgamesh most likely spells it Enk'son, it's changed a bit in the last few thousand years).
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no, the death cult that displays their magical leader nailed to a cross
Apparently he reappeared as a zombie
can't get any more death culty than that
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Actually, no I'm not. Exxon is evil.
Did anyone not know this?
Everybody knew.
Hex On Exxon!
Miles cable, claws, driller killer ripping holes, all tattered the cloth stained, regaining.
All the weather, acid rains, so sweet sweat streaks downpoured on humility.
Colder time, talking hints, watching tests of heat, mangled meat, retaliate! No blaming.
In future dreams could you have stopped it from happening?
Best left a spectator? Spectacle? Traitor!
All the time's, placed, first place!
Farther down, pull the trigger, gauging, gauging.
Cars kills at will, melted profits, book burning.
How undone, written slurs, the meaning...
Oh the pasts they will repeat, hard to hit, so are beat.
Melted profits, the past, melting, under honor.
Cars kill at will, cars kill at will.
Mr. Fables' rolls, altogether mutating. The chains rattle, happy to perform!
In the war of famine, no where arid food growing now.
Warming trends the place, passive cows to feed the weak.
Product waste! Give back. Oil coming in.
Make a million living things suffer, hidden, black garbage body bags.
What of that change that could save everything?
That paper shredder, patent tender, puts us back in time again.
Exxon, your black hearts make me sick.
Budgets that burst with oil, crude gas in purse. No compassion, common criminals seek asylum.
Concrete pillow, Exxon dreams, hidden hierarchy. No one in power taking blame.
Skinny Puppy, 1989
https://youtu.be/5KHDb9xwHvc [youtu.be]
Re: I'm shocked (Score:2)
Too bad ... (Score:5, Insightful)
DEFI (Score:1)
Surely with what is happening with DeFi we can create carbon negative Liquidity Pools, Grassroots Blockchain Trade-able Energy Quotas, Where people can store their "wealth" in smartcontracts that pay out if we can survive the Anthropocene .
Re:DEFI (Score:4, Interesting)
It is just market moves. Exxon sees the other fossil fuel corporation shifting out of the fossil fuel market and into other forms of energy. This creates a low price opportunity to buy into those fossil fuel sources to take them over, set up a monopoly and do manipulative things with pricing. They want to be the vultures of the fossil fuel era. Evil feeding on evil.
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Bingo!
Too bad we don't have cap and tax, no trade (Score:2)
Carbon trading is just a way to rubberstamp pollution.
Cap and tax, do not cap and trade.
Spend the taxes on ecological remediation and carbon fixing.
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Spend the taxes on
Yeah. Like that ever works. The money will end up funding UBI, more arms for Israel and gender reassignment surgery for pre-teens. And once the gov't becomes addicted to carbon tax revenues, they will encourage more pollution. To increase the cash flow.
Captain Planet villainy on bath salts (Score:5, Insightful)
If in the early 2000s you had written a sci-fi novel where the villain was a megacoporation that set out to destroy their planet, the only habitable planet in reach or in sight, after secretly realizing exactly what it was doing long before anyone else did, it would've been considered a ridiculous idea, but now here we are.
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I remember a very old short story by Isaac Asimov - I don't remember the title and the plot is not relevant to the matter - set in an alternate timeline, where Earth is ruled by a bunch of guys dressed like Uncle Pennybags (the character on the box and board of Monopoly: top hat, tailcoat, striped trousers and the rest). Trains are still pulled by soot-spewing steam engines because, you know, you do not ditch a perfectly profitable business, just because some fool has invented the electric motor... (of cour
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Nobody is saying that it's surprising. We're saying that it's evil.
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And slave companies wanted to continue selling more slaves.
Just because there's existing companies doing something bad doesn't mean they should be allowed to continue.
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The morons are the people who think plastic can only be made from petroleum.
And also the people who enabled AC posting again
So how do we stop them? (Score:2)
Surely with everything else that we know is happening, there has to be laws in place to prevent them from doing this. Right?
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That's like saying you want to stop slavery by not buying a slave.
More needs to be done to stop them than simply "not buying gasoline".
Re:So how do we stop them? (Score:4, Informative)
Oil is sucked out of the ground because most people use it.
To stop the oil producers, stop the people using it. Most people are not going to be on your side if you stop them from getting oil (without a replacement).
Re: So how do we stop them? (Score:2)
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You're not going to improve what sucks about the so called free market by participating in it.
Convince people to stop using oil.
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Convincing people is one thing for sure, but even if you've convinced them then funding the change of vehicles to electric/hybrid and change of central heating from oil/gas over to things like Electric or preferably GSHP/ASHP/Solar and thermal stores is a big mountain to climb over too.
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Re: So how do we stop them? (Score:2)
Donâ(TM)t forget federal action to outlaw slavery.
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Without federal action, "people" would only have referred to white landowners, who mostly favoured slavery. The very notion that slaves or women could be considered "people" was subversive.
If federal action was so inefficient, how come the Confederate States broke out of the USA?
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If federal action was so inefficient, how come the Confederate States broke out of the USA?
Who are you talking to? Why do you think the efficiency of the federal government has anything to do with this?
Re:So how do we stop them? (Score:4, Interesting)
Slavery ended because most people were against it.
But slavery did NOT end because customers decided to not use cotton, or switch to cotton alternatives, or switch to cotton produced without slavery. Fixing the demand side was useless.
Slavery ended because enough people were fed up with it that they were willing to either a) have their government pay slave owners to stop owning slaves or b) have their government wage a bloody war against slave owners.
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But slavery did NOT end because customers decided to not use cotton, or switch to cotton alternatives, or switch to cotton produced without slavery.
Uh yeah, actually they did. Seriously, look up that stuff before posting, your ignorance is embarrassing.
Slavery ended because enough people were fed up with it that they were willing to either a) have their government pay slave owners to stop owning slaves or b) have their government wage a bloody war against slave owners.
I want you to listen very carefully and turn on your brain: if most people had supported slavery, the government would have done none of that.
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Why don't you bolster your arguments with some documentation? Surely not because said documentation only exists in your fevered mind?
There were boycotts, but there is no indication that consumer boycotts hastened the end of slavery in the US.
See e.g. http://www.quakersintheworld.o... [quakersintheworld.org]
Slavery ended because CITIZENS wanted it gone. CONSUMERS did very little. Similarly the Global Warming will be mitigated if the CITIZENS take actions, not just CONSUMERS boycotting products.
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Wow, so this is what troll bot looks like.
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"Slavery ended because most people were against it."
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No. The alleged administration has gutted EPA and gone after the environmental laws with the oil industry hacks they put in place to run the federal agencies. Remember, the alleged president destroys everything he touches.
I just had an idea for a killer app. (Score:2)
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Terrorists (Score:2)
Can we designate them as a terrorist organization and act accordingly?
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Who emits what? (Score:2)
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This is not exactly true. Exxon gets effective government subsidies, for example turning their oil into fertilizers that are then subsidised or use on farms. This stuff is very much hidden and beyond the control of normal people. When they increase their production they probably plan to increase their political "donations" which will increase the demand for their products independent of what other people do.
In order to reduce demand it's absolutely needed to get rid of the many hidden fossil fuel subsidi
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What an utter rubbish article. Exxon doesn't emit those greenhouse gases
Fuck me you have no idea how a refinery works do you. You burning the end product is only a part of the carbon cycle. Refining is an incredibly frigging carbon intensive process, one that can be optimised and have its emissions reduced in many ways. E.g. at least we stopped firing crude furnaces with oil lances and switched to natural gas. At least those companies located in countries which have actual emissions laws have. So is upstream for that matter. There are some companies out there which are more tha
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My issue was with the article conflating direct and indirect emissions, and
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Well at least you backpedaled and admitted that Exxon claim to emit 20% rather than the free pass you seemed to give them. To be clear that is 20% of one of the most carbon intensive processes we have on the planet. And while good ol' Exxon is giving the world the middle finger the likes of Shell, BP, and Total are actually investing in electric charging infrastructure as well directly helping to reduce even customers burning the damn product.
I'm impressed though. After 15 years in the oil and gas industry
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Exxon doesn't emit those greenhouse gases.
Yes. Yes it does. I know it is out of fashion, but RTFA.
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Exxon bashing ... (Score:1)
... is futile. The climate doesn't care whether the emissions come from them, BP, Shell, or Saudi Aramco.
We won't have a chance to fix climate change unless we force *all* fossil fuel extractors to
reduce production *or* compensate (but with real, working negative emission tech).
Until we do so, singling out one producer only serves to grab public attention.
How appropriate (Score:2)
Fucking dinosaurs doubling down on dead dinosaur fuel. Even among climate-change doubters the tide is turning, and renewables are getting cheaper and gaining ground. Exxon is going to get their ass handed to them in the market.
Big whoop (Score:1)
OMFG! The size of the population of GREECE!!! We're all gonna DIE! Yeah, um, New York City has nearly twice that population.