Exxon
Scientists Predicted Global Warming, Even as Company Cast Doubts, Study Finds
·
Exxon’s scientists made remarkably accurate
projections of just how much burning fossil fuels would warm the planet. Their
projections were as accurate, and sometimes even more so, as those of
independent academic and government models.
·
In a statement Exxon did not address the new
study directly but said “those who talk about how ‘Exxon Knew’ are wrong in
their conclusions
·
Geoffrey Supran and
Naomi Oreskes of Harvard, and Stefan Rahmstorf of the
Potsdam Institute, carried out a quantitative analysis of global warming
projections made or recorded by Exxon scientists between 1977 and 2003.
·
Exxon’s global warming projections closely
tracked subsequent temperature increases of around 0.2 degrees Celsius of
global warming per decade
· Exxon’s scientists also correctly rejected the possibility of a coming ice age
Starting in the 1970s,
scientists working for the oil giant made remarkably accurate projections of
just how much burning fossil fuels would warm the planet.
In the late 1970s,
scientists at Exxon fitted one of the company’s supertankers
with state-of-the-art equipment to measure carbon dioxide in the ocean and in
the air, an early example of substantial research the oil giant conducted into
the science of climate change.
A new study
published Thursday in the journal Science found that over the next decades, Exxon’s
scientists made remarkably accurate projections of just how much burning fossil
fuels would warm the planet. Their projections were as accurate, and sometimes
even more so, as those of independent academic and government models.
Yet for years, the oil giant
publicly cast doubt on climate science, and cautioned against any drastic move
away from burning fossil fuels, the main driver of climate change. Exxon also
ran a public relations program — including
ads that ran in The New York Times — emphasizing uncertainties
in the scientific research on global warming.
Global warming projections
“are based on completely unproven climate models, or, more often, on sheer
speculation,” Lee Raymond, chief executive of the newly-merged ExxonMobil Corp,
said at a company annual meeting in 1999. “We do not now have a sufficient
scientific understanding of climate change to make reasonable predictions
and/or justify drastic measures,” he wrote
in a company brochure the following year.
In a statement Exxon did not
address the new study directly but said “those who talk about how ‘Exxon Knew’
are wrong in their conclusions,” referring to a slogan by environmental
activists who have accused the company of misleading the public about climate
science.
“ExxonMobil has a culture of
disciplined analysis, planning, accounting, and reporting,” the company added,
quoting a judge in a favorable verdict in New York three years
ago, albeit for a case that addressed the company’s accounting practices, not
climate science.
The new study, from
researchers at Harvard University and the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact
Research, builds on reporting showing that for
decades, Exxon scientists had warned their executives of “potentially
catastrophic” human-caused climate change.
The burning of oil, gas and
coal is raising Earth’s temperature and sea levels with devastating
consequences worldwide, including intensifying storms,
worsening drought and deadlier wildfires.
Other
fossil fuel companies, electric utilities, and automakers
have come under fire for downplaying the threat of climate change, even as
their own scientists warned of its dangers. In recent years, cities, counties
and states have filed dozens of lawsuits accusing Exxon and other companies of
public deception, and demanding billions of dollars in climate damages.
Last year, a House committee
grilled oil chiefs,
including current Exxon chief executive Darren Woods, on whether companies
misled the public about the climate. Mr. Woods said the positions were
“entirely consistent” with the scientific consensus of the time.
In the new study, Geoffrey Supran and Naomi Oreskes of Harvard, and Stefan Rahmstorf of the Potsdam Institute, carried out a
quantitative analysis of global warming projections made or recorded by Exxon
scientists between 1977 and 2003.
Those records, which include
internal memos and peer-reviewed papers published with outside academic
researchers, make up the largest public collection of global warming
projections recorded by a single company, the authors said.
Overall, Exxon’s global
warming projections closely tracked subsequent temperature increases of around
0.2 degrees Celsius of global warming per decade, the study found.
The company’s scientists, in
fact, excluded the possibility that human-caused global warming was not
occurring, the researchers found.
Exxon’s scientists also
correctly rejected the possibility of a coming ice age, even as the company
continued to refer to it in its public communications; accurately predicted
when human-caused global warming would be first detected; and estimated how
much carbon dioxide could be added to the atmosphere before warming hit a
dangerous threshold, the study found. Some of the Exxon studies predicted an
even sharper rise in temperatures than what the planet has experienced.
“We now have airtight,
unimpeachable evidence that ExxonMobil accurately predicted global warming
years before it turned around and publicly attacked climate science and
scientists,” said Dr. Supran.
“Our findings show that ExxonMobil’s public denial of climate science
contradicted its own scientists’ data.”
William D. Collins, who
leads the Climate & Ecosystem Sciences Division at the Lawrence Berkeley
National Laboratory and who was not involved with the new study, called its
analysis “very sound.”
“This is first article that
I’ve seen that is a clear and quantitative comparison of ExxonMobil’s
projections against the state of the science in the public domain,” said Dr. Collins, a lead author of a chapter on climate
projections in a 2018 report by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change,
a body of experts convened by the United Nations.
The new research showed that
Exxon’s projections “were very consistent over time,” he said. “They knew all
of that. They’ve known it for decades.”
Edward Garvey, who was hired
by Exxon in 1979 to help senior scientists at the time work on its supertanker project, said he was “not surprised that the
science was spot on.”
Dr.
Garvey and his colleagues set up a dedicated monitoring system on the
500,000-ton Esso Atlantic supertanker to log carbon
dioxide measurements in surface water and the air as it traveled
from the Gulf of Mexico to the Persian Gulf — an ambitious and novel research
effort, he said.
The wealth of data the scientists
collected, Dr. Garvey said, pointed to significant
increases in carbon dioxide levels in the ocean near the Equator, and was later
critical to understanding the role the ocean was playing in limiting warming.
At around the same time, Exxon also expanded its research into climate modeling, hiring prominent scientists from academic
institutions. But in 1982, as oil markets slumped from a glut in oil
production, Exxon terminated its supertanker project.
“What I am surprised about
is that despite all of this knowledge within the company,” Dr.
Garvey said, “they continued down the path that they did.”