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Investigation reveals scope of Big Oil’s deception and greenwashing

A US Democrat committee has found that Big Oil deliberately downplayed the dangers of fossil fuels. Its major players have also reportedly lobbied against climate laws they backed publicly for years.

Big Oil is at it yet again. The latest scoop courtesy of US Democrats reveals that fossil fuel giants have long played a shady game of publicly supporting climate initiatives while dismissing them entirely in private. The word greenwashing springs to mind.

This revelation was brought to light through a batch of subpoenaed documents, exposed right before a crucial congressional hearing.

It’s no surprise that the usual suspects are reeled off instantly. Exxon, Shell, BP, and Chevron – along with their cheerleaders at the American Petroleum Institute and the US Chamber of Commerce – have reportedly been in full deception mode since the lead up to the Paris Agreement being signed in 2015.

An investigation launched in 2021 by a Democrat committee, which disbanded when Republicans took control in 2022, has culminated in a damning report claiming these companies have ‘run campaigns to confuse and mislead the public’ for a decade.

While these companies regularly make bold declarations about reaching net-zero emissions and aligning with the Paris Agreement, their internal emails paint a very different picture.

For instance, a BP exec in 2019 was wary of committing to the 2050 net-zero target, fearing change would impact profits. In 2018, a Shell manager expressed doubts about achieving the same feat by 2050, hinting it might be more feasible by 2060 or 2070.

Moreover, these firms continue to extol the virtues of natural gas as a ‘friend to renewables,’ despite internal acknowledgments of its climate risks. They’re even funding academic papers to polish this narrative, a classic move to dress up vested interests in scholarly garb.

The report also debunks several public declarations of support for carbon taxes and opposition to regulatory rollbacks. For example, while BP publicly decried the Trump administration’s rollback of methane regulations, their lobbyists were dutifully nodding along with the proposal in the corridors of power.

The hypocrisy doesn’t stop there, either. Records reveal widespread reluctance to cooperate with congressional investigations, with many companies heavily redacting or withholding documents. Classic guilty manoeuvre: when in doubt, black it out.

As skeletons tumble out of closets everywhere, Big Oil is facing a growing scroll of lawsuits alleging deception about the dangers of fossil fuels. The new evidence will no doubt bolster these efforts, hopefully forcing companies to reckon with their ecological sabotage.

Time and again, the industry promises the sky while delivering the dirt. Strictly speaking, we absolutely cannot give these firms the benefit of the doubt.

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