Will
Big Oil Survive Long Enough to Pay for Its Climate Sins?
By Phil Mattera in Dirt Diggers Digest
Other
speakers were even more explicit about the Darwinian environment. “We will be
one of the last guys standing,” declared the CEO of Suncor Energy, which once
prospered from the tar sands boom in Alberta and is now selling off assets.
Several
dozen oil and gas producers have had to file for bankruptcy protection since
the beginning of last year. More such moves are expected. The business
consulting firm Deloitte has issued a report estimating that more than one-third of
all petroleum exploration and production companies are in precarious financial
condition, with dozens likely to make the trip to bankruptcy court.
Even
the oil majors are in trouble. Chevron reported a fourth-quarter loss of $588
million, while BP lost over $2 billion in the quarter and more than $5 billion
for 2015 as a whole. Exxon Mobil and Shell are still in the black but their
profits are down sharply.
It’s
difficult to summon much sympathy for the oil companies, given the damage they
have wrought.
As shown in the Violation Tracker database I
and my colleagues created, the petroleum industry has racked up more than $31
billion in environmental, health and safety penalties since the beginning of
2010, far more than any other industry. Much of this is the result of the
massive fines and settlements paid by BP in connection with the Deepwater
Horizon disaster in the Gulf of Mexico.
Yet
there is one reason to hope for the survival of the petroleum producers: we
need them to survive in some form so they can be taken to court over the role
they’ve played in denying the reality of the climate crisis.
As
Bill McKibben notes in a recent article, we’re now at the beginning of
an investigation of what may prove to be one of the biggest corporate scandals
in American history — the climate coverup.
At
the center of the scandal is Exxon Mobil, the biggest fossil fuel corporation
on earth and the one that is probably most culpable for suppressing evidence of
the impact of its products on climate change.
As path-breaking research by Inside Climate News showed,
Exxon — reported to be the subject of current investigations by state
prosecutors in New York and California — knew about global warming as
early as the 1970s and quietly used that knowledge for its own benefit while
keeping it from policymakers and the public.
Forty
years later, the nature of the climate crisis is public information, but Exxon
Mobil and the other oil companies continue to do business as usual. In fact,
their obsession with exploration and production even at a time of softening
demand has helped bring about the current price nosedive.
Exxon
Mobil today has assets of more than $340 billion.
Soon it may have to stop
using those resources to produce more harmful fossil fuels and instead pay out
substantial sums in damages to communities struggling to deal with the climate
mess the industry has caused.