If you care about the planet, please make sure you sit down before you start reading this post about ExxonMobil.
So.
The CEO of ExxonMobil just said this in an interview: “We’ve waited too long to open the aperture on the solution sets in terms of what we need, as a society, to start reducing emissions.”
https://fortune.com/2024/02/27/exxon-ceo-darren-woods-interview-pay-the-price-for-net-zero/
Who’s the most influential voice on climate change? Who’s to blame for inaction on climate change?
According to the CEO of ExxonMobil, it’s environmental activists.
No, really:
“Frankly, society, and the activist—the dominant voice in this discussion—has tried to exclude the industry that has the most capacity and the highest potential for helping with some of the technologies.”
Oh, and the CEO of ExxonMobil also apparently thinks consumers are to blame for climate inaction:
“Today we have opportunities to make fuels with lower carbon, but people aren’t willing to spend the money to do that.”
Gets better.
He thinks unnamed ‘people who generate emissions’ should pay for it. (Rather than, say, major transnational oil companies.)
“People who are generating the emissions need to be aware of [it] and pay the price. That’s ultimately how you solve the problem.”
https://fortune.com/2024/02/27/exxon-ceo-darren-woods-interview-pay-the-price-for-net-zero/
Worth including a quick reminder here that Exxon-Mobil made a US$36 billion profit in 2023: https://www.reuters.com/business/energy/exxon-beats-estimates-ends-2023-with-36-billion-profit-2024-02-02/#:~:text=HOUSTON%2C%20Feb%202%20(Reuters),higher%20oil%20and%20gas%20production.
Not gross revenue.
Profit.
So, remind me again. Who knew about climate change before most of the public?
“Exxon was aware of climate change, as early as 1977, 11 years before it became a public issue… This knowledge did not prevent the company (now ExxonMobil and the world’s largest oil and gas company) from spending decades refusing to publicly acknowledge climate change and even promoting climate misinformation.”
https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/exxon-knew-about-climate-change-almost-40-years-ago/
And just who, exactly, stood in the way reducing emissions all these years?
"ExxonMobil executives privately sought to undermine climate science even after the oil and gas giant publicly acknowledged the link between fossil fuel emissions and climate change, according to previously unreported documents…
“The new revelations are based on previously unreported documents subpoenaed by New York’s attorney general as part of an investigation into the company announced in 2015. They add to a slew of documents that record a decades-long misinformation campaign waged by Exxon, which are cited in a growing number of state and municipal lawsuits against big oil.”
#oil #BigOil @fuck_cars #Urbanism #UrbanPlanning #ClimateChange #environment #ExxonMobil #Exxon #business #economy #politics #capitalism #ClimateCrisis
You may want to add some information about all the subsidies the oil industry still gets, year on year, while the US government slashes subsidies for renewables: https://e360.yale.edu/digest/fossil-fuels-received-5-9-trillion-in-subsidies-in-2020-report-finds
The only way the oil industry can even remain viable, let alone competitive, is to prop it up with an unfair advantage in government money.
@voracitude I think the biggest subsidy of all is the hidden one.
Burning fossil fuels leads to more frequent and severe floods, droughts, bushfires, heatwaves, and hurricanes.
The costs of rebuilding and recovering from those disasters are a cost of using fossil fuels.
If the fossil fuel companies aren’t paying that cost, they’re receiving a subsidy. And it’s already a massive one.
Also.
I didn’t include it in the post above, but apparently the CEO of ExxonMobil is also totally against subsidies…
For climate action:
"The way that the government is incentivized and trying to catalyze investments in this space is through subsidies. Driving significant investments at a scale that even gets close to moving the needle is going to cost a lot of money.
…
“But I would tell you building a business on government subsidy is not a long-term sustainable strategy—we don’t support that.”
https://fortune.com/2024/02/27/exxon-ceo-darren-woods-interview-pay-the-price-for-net-zero/
Our military presence in the Middle East is a gigantic oil subsidy. Who does he think it is that is escorting oil tankers lol.
Externalisimg costs is classic strategy
He’s not dumb, he’s just an asshole
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@ajsadauskas @fuck_cars guillotine time
Gun violence time comrade
@ajsadauskas @fuck_cars He’s the CEO of Exxon! We know he’s an evil lying shit before he opens his mouth. Everything else is just embellishment.
@ajsadauskas @fuck_cars I agree with him people generating emissions should pay for it. Now let’s see how many tons of CO2 does Exxon produce, from drilling oil, transporting crude, refining it, transporting it onwards to its final destination…
I mean, it’s not like he’s not aware that every word coming out of his mouth is a lie…
Where are the firing squads, when we need to put the fossil fuel moguls to death?
Concerned about climate change?
You need to read @ajsadauskas 's 👆🏼 post (and some of the replies).Besides denial, gaslighting (shoving responsibility on you), and greenwashing, the fossil fuel industry push to label climate activists as criminals.
Don’t believe it?
They’ve been doing this for a while now, organised by such “institutions” as the Atlas network and ALEC.https://newrepublic.com/article/175488/meet-shadowy-global-network-vilifying-climate-protesters
@ajsadauskas @fuck_cars
It was said years ago, when climate change becomes undeniable, the deniers will blame the environmentalists. And that was a prediction not a joke.@SNerd @ajsadauskas @fuck_cars Colleague of mine has always felt when the true impacts arrive, scientists will be blamed. “Why didn’t you tell us it would be this bad?”
@fluids_guru @SNerd @ajsadauskas @fuck_cars the problem is that what scientist think of as conservative, and what politicians think of as conservative does not mash in this particular scenario.
the whole institution of science has been put into a corner where it’s not their job to speak up, and if individual scientists do, this can have dramatic repercussions for their career. you’d need the entirety of climate science standing behind those crazy “activists” (scientists who are speaking out)
@SNerd @ajsadauskas @fuck_cars projection is a tightly-coupled comorbidity of bad faith interlocutors.
The article was paywalled for me, so here: https://web.archive.org/web/20240228154718/https://fortune.com/2024/02/27/exxon-ceo-darren-woods-interview-pay-the-price-for-net-zero/
The pictures are blurred out, but then again you’re better off not looking at this lying bastard’s face.
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It’s time to bring back the corporate death penalty.
Edit: IIRC Standard Oil, the predecessor of Exxon, was instrumental in abolishing the US corporate death penalty.
the United States military is behind the curtain. All of their equipment requires silly amounts of fuel. They are the largest producer of greenhouse gases. They won’t let the oil industry implode, and they will subsidize it as necessary. since nobody controls the military industrial complex enough to revolutionize their energy strategy in the trillions scale, nobody is driving this dumpster fire.
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@ajsadauskas @fuck_cars
Thank you for reading that (& summarizing) so I didn’t have to. I think my head would have exploded 🤯