Assessing ExxonMobil's climate change communications (1977.
ExxonMobil's four decades of climate science research ExxonMobil has supported development of climate science in partnership with governments and academic institutions for nearly 40 years.
This paper assesses whether ExxonMobil Corporation has in the past misled the general public about climate change. We present an empirical document-by-document textual content analysis and.
Harvard Professor Naomi Oreskes and Dr. Geoffrey Supran conducted a peer-reviewed analysis of ExxonMobil's 40-year history of climate change communications, published in 2017.
Those efforts were swatted down, but four years later a decisive 62 percent of shareholders called on ExxonMobil, in a non-binding vote last May, to detail how climate change will affect its future.
The climate change movement rests much of its validity in climate change scientists, which constitute approximately 97% on scientists doing research on climate change. Their agendas are led by their intellectual ideas as their data overwhelmingly supports climate change as a anthropogenic cause.
The Climate Denial Machine: How the Fossil Fuel Industry Blocks Climate Action. It takes a lot to defy common sense on a global scale, all to benefit one industry. But for decades, fossil fuel interests have done just that, running a sophisticated and sprawling network of well-funded think tanks and front groups with one goal: Stop any real climate action, no matter the cost to billions.
The ExxonMobil climate change controversy concerns ExxonMobil 's activities related to promoting climate change denial. Since the 1970s, ExxonMobil engaged in research, lobbying, advertising, and grant making, some of which were conducted with the purpose of delaying widespread acceptance and action on global warming.