Big Oil hearing to kick off U.S. probe into climate disinformation
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[October 27, 2021]
By Timothy Gardner and Valerie Volcovici
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A Congressional
hearing this week into whether oil companies misled the public about
climate change marks the start of a broad probe that may extend to other
industries from advertising to social media, according to a lawmaker
leading the effort.
The sweeping nature of the Democrat-led investigation reflects rising
urgency within the party to address global warming as Republicans and
moderate Democrats block climate provisions at the heart of President
Joe Biden’s spending bill, and as global leaders prepare to meet on
climate change in Glasgow, Scotland next month.
"This will be a year-long investigation and the hearings mark the
beginning of it," Representative Ro Khanna, a progressive Democrat on
the House committee told Reuters in an interview. "The idea is for them
to admit to the American people what they have done."
Top executives from Exxon Mobil Corp, BP America, Chevron Corp and Shell
Oil, along with lobby groups the American Petroleum Institute and the
Chamber of Commerce, will testify on Oct. 28 at the House oversight
committee hearing.
Democratic lawmakers have said they want to model the event after the
House's Big Tobacco probe of the 1990s which took place over many months
and eventually revealed that companies buried evidence that cigarettes
are addictive and harmful.
Khanna said Thursday’s hearing would focus on the energy industry's
denial for decades that their products played a leading role in fueling
climate change, and on whether the companies' current claims of
supporting climate action were real.
He said the committee would also eventually turn to the oil industry’s
use of advertising and social media platforms and seek testimony from
executives in those companies too.
Executives from social media firms like Facebook Inc and Twitter Inc
have already come under intense scrutiny from Congress over their role
in the pervasion of fake news and their impact on the well-being of
young social media users.
The CEOs who have agreed to testify at the virtual hearing are Exxon
Mobil's Darren Woods, BP America's David Lawler, Chevron's Michael Wirth
and Shell Oil President Gretchen Watkins. American Petroleum Institute
President Mike Sommers and Chamber of Commerce President Suzanne Clark
will also testify.
All have denied deliberately misleading the public about climate change.
BIG OIL'S STRATEGY
A source involved in the oil industry's pre-hearing preparations said
the companies hoped to use the hearings to highlight their recent
efforts to address climate change through investment in renewables and
research and development.
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US Democratic Representative Ro Khanna, vice chair of the 98-member
Congressional Progressive Caucus, holds a news conference during Web
Summit, in Lisbon, Portugal, November 6, 2019. REUTERS/Pedro Nunes/File
Photo
The executives were also expected to highlight the
rise in gasoline and natural gas prices due to the global energy
supply crunch and argue that a rapid shift away from fossil fuels
would lead to even higher energy bills, the source said.
Committee Chairwoman Carolyn Maloney had asked the executives for
documents dating back to the 1970s showing who the companies and
groups funded on climate campaigns and what internal scientists had
advised them on climate.
Khanna said the committee was unhappy with the number of documents
that had been submitted so far, and implied that it could lead to
subpoenas. "We're willing to use any tool at our disposal to get
more documents," he said.
He said the documents received so far included some from a former
Exxon lobbyist, Keith McCoy, who was secretly recorded https://www.reuters.com/article/us-usa-lobbying-exxon-climate-idCAKCN2E62TJ
by environmental group Greenpeace, saying the company's support of a
carbon tax was a ruse to appear progressive on climate change since
the company believed the idea would never become law.
Exxon has said McCoy’s statements were an inaccurate depiction of
the company's position. McCoy did not immediately respond to a
request for comment.
Thursday's hearing will also likely highlight a strategic rift
between Europe and U.S-based energy companies on climate change.
European companies like BP and Shell are moving faster into clean
energy businesses than U.S. based Exxon and Chevron.
"I think it's an opportunity for a company like BP to show that we
are in action toward a net zero goal by 2050," said J.P, Fielder, a
BP America spokesperson. Shell's Watkins said meeting the demand for
reliable energy while addressing climate "is a huge undertaking and
one of the defining challenges of our time."
Exxon spokesperson Casey Norton said the company had made
“substantial investments in next-generation technologies” and
“advocates for responsible climate-related policies.”
Chevron did not comment.
(Reporting by Timothy Gardner; Editing by Stephen Coates)
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