URL | https://Persagen.com/docs/ExxonMobil.html | |
Sources | Persagen.com | Wikipedia | other sources (cited in situ) | |
Source URL | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ExxonMobil | |
Date published | 2021-10-29 | |
Curation date | 2021-10-29 | |
Curator | Dr. Victoria A. Stuart, Ph.D. | |
Modified | ||
Editorial practice | Refer here | Date format: yyyy-mm-dd | |
Summary | Exxon Mobil Corporation (ExxonMobil) is an American multinational oil and gas corporation headquartered in Irving, Texas (incorporated in New Jersey). ExxonMobil's primary brands are Exxon, Mobil, Esso, and ExxonMobil Chemical. One of the world's largest companies by revenue, ExxonMobil from 1996 to 2017 varied from the first to sixth largest publicly traded company by market capitalization. | |
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Exxon Mobil Corporation (ExxonMobil)
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Corporate Information | |
Name | Exxon Mobil Corporation (ExxonMobil) |
Founded | 1999-11-30 |
Descended from | Standard Oil (John D. Rockefeller) |
Type | Public company |
ISIN | US30231G1022 |
Traded as | NYSE: XOM (S&P 100; S&P 500) |
Location | Global |
Headquarters | Irving, Texas, U.S.A. |
Areas served | Global |
Industry | |
Predecessor | |
CEO | Darren W. Woods |
Chairman | Darren W. Woods |
Controversies |
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Products | |
Brands | |
Revenue | 2020: US$178.57 billion |
Operating income | 2020: (US$29.45 billion) (decrease) |
Total assets | 2020: US$332.75 billion |
Total equity | 2020: US$157.15 billion |
Employees | 2020: 72,000 |
Subsidiaries |
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Website | Corporate.ExxonMobil.com |
Exxon Mobil Corporation, stylized as ExxonMobil, is an American multinational oil and gas corporation headquartered in Irving, Texas. ExxonMobil is the largest direct descendant of John D. Rockefeller's Standard Oil, and was formed on 1999-11-30, by the merger of Exxon (formerly the Standard Oil Company of New Jersey) and Mobil (formerly the Standard Oil Company of New York). ExxonMobil's primary brands are Exxon,  Mobil, Esso, and ExxonMobil Chemical. ExxonMobil is incorporated in New Jersey.
One of the world's largest companies by revenue, ExxonMobil from 1996 to 2017 varied from the first to sixth largest publicly traded company by market capitalization. ExxonMobil was ranked third globally in the Forbes Global 2000 list in 2016, and was the tenth most profitable company in the Fortune 500 in 2017. As of 2018, the company ranked second in the Fortune 500 rankings of the largest United States corporations by total revenue. Approximately 55.56% of the company's shares are held by institutions. As of March 2019, ExxonMobil's largest shareholders include The Vanguard Group (8.15%) [founder of the dark money funder the Vanguard Charitable Endowment Program], BlackRock (6.61%), and State Street Corporation (4.83%).
ExxonMobil is one of the largest of the world's Big Oil companies. As of 2007, it had daily production of 3.921 million BOE (barrels of oil equivalent); but significantly smaller than a number of national companies. In 2008, this was approximately 3% of world production, which is less than several of the largest state-owned petroleum companies. When ranked by oil and gas reserves, it is 14th in the world - with less than 1% of the total. ExxonMobil's reserves were 20 billion BOE at the end of 2016 and the 2007 rates of production were expected to last more than 14 years. With 37 oil refineries in 21 countries constituting a combined daily refining capacity of 6.3 million barrels (1,000,000 m3), ExxonMobil is the seventh largest refiner in the world, a title that was also associated with Standard Oil since its incorporation in 1870.
ExxonMobil had been criticized for its slow response to cleanup efforts after the 1989 Exxon Valdez oil spill in Alaska, considered to be one of the world's worst oil spills in terms of damage to the environment. ExxonMobil has a history of lobbying for climate change denial and against the scientific consensus that global warming is caused by the burning of fossil fuels. ExxonMobil has also been the target of accusations of improperly dealing with human rights issues, influence on American foreign policy, and its impact on the future of nations.
[📌 pinned article] [Science.org, 2023-01-13] Supran G., Oreskes N., and Rahmstorf S. (2023-01-13)
For decades, some members of the
In 2015, investigative journalists discovered internal company memos indicating that
Many of the uncovered fossil fuel industry documents include explicit projections of the amount of warming expected to occur over time in response to rising atmospheric
Our results show that in private and academic circles since the late 1970s and early 1980s,
Moreover, we show that
Today, dozens of cities, counties, and states are suing oil and gas companies [
Climate projections by the fossil fuel industry have never been assessed. On the basis of company records, we quantitatively evaluated all available global warming projections documented by - and in many cases modeled by -
[ ... snip ... ]
Our findings about the company's early understanding of climate science contradict many of the claims that
It has been established that, for many years,
In 2000,
In 2001, an
In 2005,
In 2007,
In 2013,
We gain additional insights into how
Panel 1b of Fig. 1 is a graph of the global warming "effect of CO2 on an
In 1997,
In 2001, an
In 2003, US Senator James Inhofe, who has to date received $2.3 million in campaign contributions from oil and gas companies, including
In 2004, a report published by the
A second insight involves
A third insight concerns the "
[ ... snip ... ]
[Truthout.org, 2023-01-12]
[CommonDreams.org, 2023-01-13]
[CBC.ca, 2023-01-13]
[📌 pinned article] [Paul D. Thacker, DeSmog.com, 2021-10-29] In Their Own Words: The Dirty Dozen Documents of Big Oil's Secret Climate Knowledge. Science historian Ben Franta unpacks some of the most critical documents exposing what the fossil fuel industry knew and when they knew it. | local copy
"Did we aggressively fight against some of the science? Yes," said ExxonMobil lobbyist Keith McCoy. "Did we join some of these 'shadow groups' to work against some of the early efforts? Yes, that's true. But there's nothing illegal about that." These are the words McCoy was caught saying on a secretly recorded video released by Unearthed [Wikipedia entry], Greenpeace U.K.'s investigative journalism arm, and the British Channel 4 News this summer exposing how the oil giant and lobby groups such as the American Petroleum Institute [DeSmog.com entry] seed doubt about climate change and undermine legislation to stop global warming.
These revelations quickly spurred calls for Congress to investigate Exxon's and other fossil fuel companies' efforts to obstruct climate action. On 2021-07-26, the United States House Committee on Oversight and Reform sent a letter to Keith McCoy requesting his voluntary appearance before the committee. And on 2021-10-28, Congress questioned the CEOs of ExxonMobil, Chevron, BP America, Shell, and the American Petroleum Institute on their history of blocking climate policy.
For years, academics, journalists, and activists have been unearthing documents proving that the fossil fuel industry knew about the dangers of climate change since the late 1950s. That's many, many years before Keith McCoy was even twinkle in his daddy's eye and decades before he came to Washington to join in Exxon's campaign to deny science and delay action to save the planet from "catastrophic climate change" - a term Exxon used back in 1981.
These documents show how companies worked to erode public acceptance of climate science over the years - including Exxon corporate reports from the late 1970s, revealed by DeSmog in 2016, which stated "There is no doubt" that CO2 from the burning of fossil fuels was a growing "problem."
To explain the long history of what the fossil fuel industry knew and when they knew it, Stanford University science historian Ben Franta has collected a dozen of his favorite documents.
[ ... snip ... ]
[CTVNews.ca, 2021-10-28] Exxon CEO Darren Woods denies spreading disinformation on climate change.
ExxonMobil's chief executive said Thursday [2021-10-28] that his company "does not spread disinformation regarding climate change" as he and other oil company chiefs countered congressional allegations the industry concealed evidence about the dangers of it. Testifying at a landmark House hearing, CEO Darren Woods said ExxonMobil "has long acknowledged the reality and risks of climate change, and it has devoted significant resources to addressing those risks." The oil giant's public statements on climate "are and have always been truthful, fact-based ... and consistent" with mainstream climate science, Woods said. Woods was among top officials at four major oil companies testifying Thursday as congressional Democrats investigate what they describe as a decades-long, industry-wide campaign to spread disinformation about the role of fossil fuels in causing global warming.
The much-anticipated hearing before the House Oversight Committee [United States House Committee on Oversight and Reform] comes after months of public efforts by Democrats to obtain documents and other information on the oil industry's role in stopping climate action over multiple decades [climate change denial]. The appearance of the four oil executives -- from ExxonMobil, Chevron, BP America, and Shell -- has drawn comparisons to a high-profile hearing in the 1990s with tobacco executives who famously testified that they didn't believe nicotine was addictive.
"The fossil fuel industry has had scientific evidence about the dangers of climate change since at least 1977. Yet for decades, the industry spread denial and doubt about the harm of its products -- undermining the science and preventing meaningful action on climate change even as the global climate crisis became increasingly dire," said Reps. Carolyn Maloney, D-N.Y., and Ro Khanna, D-Calif. "For far too long, Big Oil has escaped accountability for its central role in bringing our planet to the brink of a climate catastrophe. That ends today," said Maloney, who chairs the Oversight panel. "This hearing is just the start of our investigation," added Khanna, who leads a subcommittee on the environment. "These companies must be held accountable."
The committee released a memo Thursday [2021-10-28] charging that the oil industry's public support for climate reforms has not been matched by meaningful actions, and that the industry has spent billions of dollars to block reforms. Oil companies frequently boast about their efforts to produce clean energy in advertisements and social media posts accompanied by sleek videos or pictures of wind turbines. "Today's staff memo shows Big Oil's campaign to 'greenwash' their role in the climate crisis in action," Maloney said. "These oil companies pay lip service to climate reforms, but behind the scenes they spend far more time lobbying to preserve their lucrative tax breaks."
Carolyn Maloney and other Democrats have focused particular ire on Exxon, after a senior lobbyist for the company was caught in a secret video bragging that Exxon had fought climate science through "shadow groups" and had targeted influential senators in an effort to weaken President Joe Biden's climate agenda, including a bipartisan infrastructure bill and a sweeping climate and social policy bill currently moving through Congress.
Keith McCoy, a former Washington-based lobbyist for Exxon, dismissed the company's public expressions of support for a proposed carbon tax on fossil fuel emissions as a "talking point." McCoy's comments were made public in June by the environmental group Greenpeace UK, which secretly recorded him and another lobbyist in Zoom interviews. McCoy no longer works for the company, an Exxon spokesperson said last month [2021-09].
[ ... snip ... ]
[IndependentMediaInstitute.org, 2021-10-26] Despite Cutbacks, ExxonMobil Continues to Fund Climate Science Denial. ExxonMobil has spent more than $39 million to manufacture doubt about climate science.
[IndependentMediaInstitute.org, 2021-10-12] To Find Out If ExxonMobil Really Supports a Carbon Tax, Just Follow the Money. Despite claiming to endorse a carbon tax, ExxonMobil has funneled millions of dollars to lawmakers who oppose the idea. | Keith McCoy, the Exxon Mobil lobbyist who revealed industry climate strategies in a secretly recorded video, no longer works for the oil giant.
[Bloomberg.com, 2020-10-05] Exxon's Plan for Surging Carbon Emissions Revealed in Leaked Documents. Internal projections from one of world's largest oil producers show an increase in its enormous contribution to global warming.
[ReadSludge.com, 2021-08-03] Exxon Lobbyist Caught on Tape Is an Advisor to Congressional Black Caucus Foundation. The lobbyist, Keith McCoy, was caught on video discussing how his company has fought climate science and worked to stop Congress from passing climate bills. The CBC Foundation has declined to boot him from its advisory board.
ExxonMobil senior lobbyist Keith McCoy was caught on video more than a month ago [2021-06] saying that he and his employer fight congressional climate action by using "shadow groups" and centrist think tanks. But the Congressional Black Caucus Foundation has so far decided to keep McCoy on as an advisor.
McCoy is a member of the Congressional Black Caucus Foundation's (CBC Foundation; CBCF) corporate advisory council, which "[advises] the CBCF's Board of Directors on policy, special initiatives, and leadership development." The CBCF's Board of Directors currently includes six members of the United States House of Representatives, some of whom hold positions on the House committee with jurisdiction over legislation related to environmental protections and climate change. The CBCF is a nonprofit affiliate of the Congressional Black Caucus that researches how policies affect Black communities, publishes legislative reports, and hosts an annual legislative conference that it describes as "the leading policy conference on issues impacting African Americans and the global Black community."
On 2021-06-30, a Greenpeace-affiliated outlet released video of Keith McCoy, a senior director of federal relations for Exxon [ExxonMobil], telling an undercover reporter that his company works behind the scenes to stall action on climate change [climate change denial] even as it claims publicly to support the Paris Agreement and policies like a carbon tax. McCoy, who believed he was giving advice to someone who was looking to hire a lobbyist, said that the company backs a carbon tax because it believes it will never happen but gives it a good talking point.
[2020-06-25] DC Is the Latest to Sue Exxon and Big Oil for Climate Disinformation Campaigns
[2020-06-24] Minnesota Attorney General Sues Exxon, Koch and API for Climate Deception
[2020-06-09] "must-read:" Bradley [Foundation] Spent Millions on Voter Suppression, Union Busters, Climate Deniers, and Right-Wing Media in 2019. As part of Bradley's strategic vision, it invests in groups to defund and dismantle unions, to fuel a web of climate change deniers, and to prop up right-wing media
[2020-05-27] Exxon, Amazon and Facebook Should Heed Shareholders' Calls for Political Activity Disclosure, Removal of Political Misinformation. Misinformation, undisclosed political spending continue to undermine our democracy
[2020-05-20] Exxon Sued Again for 'Misleading' Advertising. Mentions: BP plc
[2020-02-06] ExxonMobil Got Congress to Trade Arms for Offshore Gas. Mentions: AmCham Cyprus | American Hellenic Educational Progressive Association | American Jewish Committee | Christians United for Israel | Seth Cropsey | Eastern Mediterranean Security and Energy Partnership Act (Senators Bob Menendez, Marco Rubio) | ExxonMobil | General Atomics | Hellenic American Leadership Council | Hudson Institute | Paul Manafort | Secretary of State Mike Pompeo | Prime Policy Group (successor to Black, Manafort, Stone and Kelly) | Qatar Petroleum | Senator Chuck Schumer | Roger Stone | Trump White House | Bulgaria; Cyprus; Greece; Israel; Italy
See also [2017-02-06|07] Donald J. Trump and the Deep State. Mentions: Alfa Bank (oligarchical billionaire Mikhail Fridman) | Arkansas Project | Steve Bannon | Citigroup | Richard "Dick" Cheney; Halliburton | Jay Clayton (Trump's SEC Chairman) | Gary Cohn (former president of Goldman Sachs; Trump's former Director of the National Economic Council | Council on Foreign Relations | "Deep State:" military-industrial complex; intelligence community; Wall Street; plutocrats (note older Citigroup white papers); big oil; mainstream media (e.g., Jeff Bezos owns Washington Post); national security officials; Silicon Valley | Davos Group | Betsy DeVos (& brother Erik Prince: founder/owner of notorious private army Blackwater) | Democracy Alliance | Export-Import Bank | ExxonMobil | Exxon-Rosneft exploration deal | Michael Flynn, (briefly) Trump's National Security Advisor | Goldman Sachs alums (Steve Bannon; Clayton; Cohn; Steve Mnuchin; ...) | Heritage Foundation | John Birch Society | JPMorgan Chase | Koch family (brothers Charles and David Koch); Koch Foundation | Paul Manafort | Robert Mercer | Steve Mnuchin (former Goldman Sachs banker; Trump's Secretary of the Treasury) | Morgan Stanley | National Association of Manufacturers | Mike Pompeo (former Director of CIA; Trump's Secretary of State) | Roger Stone, (Washington lobbying firm Black, Manafort, Stone, and Kelly) | Russia | super billionaires | Tea Party | Rex Tillerson (former Exxon CEO), Trump's Secretary of State | Donald Trump
[2020-01-15] ExxonMobil Is the Most Damaging Tech Company.
[2020-01-08] Imperial Oil, Canada's Exxon Subsidiary, Ignored Its Own Climate Change Research for Decades, Archive Shows.
[2005-{05/06} issue] Put a Tiger In Your Think Tank. ExxonMobil has pumped more than $8 million into more than 40 think tanks; media outlets; and consumer, religious, and even civil rights groups that preach skepticism about the oncoming climate catastrophe. Herewith, a representative overview.
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