Exxon Mobil |
ExxonMobil has been briefing journalists for three years that they were going to stop funding these groups. The reality is that they are still doing it. If the world's largest oil company wants to fund climate change denial then it should be upfront about it, and not tell people it has stopped.
In a 2008 report on its corporate citizenship practices, the oil company promised to cut funding to groups that "divert attention" from the need to shift away from fossil fuels such as oil, gas and coal. Yet according to company records, ExxonMobil donated $75,000 to the National Center for Policy Analysis (NCPA) and $50,000 to the Heritage Foundation in 2008. both groups have, according to Ward, "published misleading and inaccurate information about climate change."
Climate scientists overwhelmingly accept that global average temperatures are rising due to human emissions of greenhouse gases, primarily due to the burning of fossil fuels. The relative cooling experienced in 2008 is widely accepted as a natural, short-term change that is part of a larger warming trend.
The NCPA announces on its Web site that "NCPA scholars believe that while the causes and consequences of the earth's current warming trend is [sic] still unknown, the cost of actions to substantially reduce [carbon dioxide] emissions would be quite high and result in economic decline, accelerated environmental destruction, and do little or nothing to prevent global warming regardless of its cause."
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