Current:Home > NewsExxon Turns to Academia to Try to Discredit Harvard Research -消息
Exxon Turns to Academia to Try to Discredit Harvard Research
View
Date:2025-04-12 12:30:22
ExxonMobil is not known for its acquiescence—tenacious litigation and well-funded advertising are the oil giant’s favored methods for trying to swat away opponents. And in the latest flare-up in an ongoing battle between the company and two Harvard researchers, Exxon has now turned to the pages of an academic journal to continue its relentless self-defense.
Three years ago, Geoffrey Supran, a post-doctoral research fellow at Harvard University, and Naomi Oreskes, a professor at the school, published a peer-reviewed article that examined nearly four decades of internal documents, including documents obtained by InsideClimate News, and public statements by Exxon and its predecessors. They found “a discrepancy between what ExxonMobil’s scientists and executives discussed about climate change privately and in academic circles and what it presented to the general public.”
The authors concluded that the company had misled the public about climate science, a finding that lent academic weight to the reporting InsideClimate News had published two years earlier. Exxon has tried to discredit the authors and their research, and last week, that effort reached the pages of the journal that published the original work.
On Friday, Environmental Research Letters published a comment by Vijay Swarup, Exxon’s vice president of research and development, that seeks to rebut the 2017 research, saying it has “at least two methodological flaws.”
Swarup argues that Supran and Oreskes misleadingly attributed public statements made by Mobil before the two companies merged in 1999, including advertorials published in the New York Times, to Exxon. And, he asserts, the researchers then used those statements to demonstrate inconsistency with Exxon’s internal documents and published research.
Swarup also claims that the researchers erred by examining only a tiny percentage of the advertorials that Mobil published in The New York Times, a selection that Swarup says was “cherry-picked by another entity, Greenpeace, an activist group engaged in a long running anti-ExxonMobil campaign.” In the 2017 paper, Supran and Oreskes said they had sourced the advertorials “from a collection compiled by” Greenpeace.
Finally, Swarup cites a review that Exxon commissioned of the 2017 article, which questioned the method that Supran and Oreskes used to analyze the documents. All these together, Swarup writes, “call into question the publication’s conclusions.”
But the journal also published a reply by Supran and Oreskes.
In their reply, Supran and Oreskes call Swarup’s claims “misleading and incorrect,” and draw on newly-available documents that they say only reinforce their original conclusion and further undermine Swarup’s claims.
Supran and Oreskes say that only 4 percent of the advertorials Mobil published addressed climate change and so only this small subset was relevant to their research. And they reject Swarup’s assertion that they conflated statements by Mobil with documents attributed to Exxon—in their study, they write, they “explicitly attributed each individual advertorial to one of Exxon, Mobil, or ExxonMobil Corp.”
But Supran and Oreskes also cite an addendum to their original research that draws on additional materials they say underscore the fact that executives and scientists at Mobil, as well as those at Exxon, were well aware of the state of climate science. The addendum has been accepted by a journal but has not yet been published. One of those documents is a 1983 “Status Report” on global warming by Mobil that, the authors write, “cautioned that if ‘urgent national concern’ about the greenhouse effect emerged, ‘restrictions on fossil fuel and land use might be established.’”
Supran declined to comment, saying he is waiting to discuss the new findings until the addendum is published, which he expects will be within a few weeks. Exxon did not immediately reply to a request for comment.
The company has alleged that Supran and Oreskes—along with other organizations, including InsideClimate News, and some state attorneys general that have sued or investigated the company—are part of a conspiracy to tarnish its image, and has sought to discredit their work. Those efforts have included, among other things, a Twitter campaign; a letter to European Parliamentarians; and filings in some lawsuits against the company.
Exxon’s attack rests in part on charges that a group of philanthropies are funding the work: The Rockefeller Brothers Fund supported Supran’s and Oreskes’ 2017 research, and is also among the funders of InsideClimate News. But their case against the researchers is also based on research that Exxon paid for, which was not peer reviewed. These charges have not gained much traction in the courts, where Exxon has used them to try to have cases against the company dismissed.
Instead, the latest back-and-forth may only draw attention to the type of behavior for which Exxon has drawn scrutiny from journalists, advocates and, increasingly, lawsuits from state and local governments. The legal claims have cited news reports by InsideClimate News and others, as well as Supran and Oreskes’ research, to argue that Exxon misled the public about climate change and fought efforts to cut greenhouse gas emissions, and should therefore help pay the costs those governments face as more severe wildfires, storms and rising seas batter their residents and infrastructure.
Supran and Oreskes, in their response, point out that Swarup does not explicitly reject their original conclusion that the company and its predecessors misled the public, an assertion they say is clearly backed by the evidence.
“Faced with this,” they write, “Swarup resorts to the familiar tactic of trying to create doubt about scientific conclusions by questioning the research methodologies used or the motivations of the researchers. He continues ExxonMobil’s established pattern of attempting to discredit—rather than disprove—scientific findings that cannot, in fact, be disproved, because all available evidence supports them. ExxonMobil Corp’s reaction is predictable and ironic, because it is a case in point of what we described in our original study.”
veryGood! (7437)
Related
- Residents worried after ceiling cracks appear following reroofing works at Jalan Tenaga HDB blocks
- 1 woman dead, 3 others injured after UTV hits deer, rolls off road in Iowa accident
- Travel on Over to See America Ferrera's Sisterhood With Blake Lively, Amber Tamblyn and Alexis Bledel
- 1 woman dead, 3 others injured after UTV hits deer, rolls off road in Iowa accident
- Will the 'Yellowstone' finale be the last episode? What we know about Season 6, spinoffs
- Abu Ghraib military contractor warned bosses of abuses 2 weeks after arriving, testimony reveals
- The Best Vintage-Inspired Sunglasses to Give You That Retro Feel This Spring
- NBA play-in tournament: 76ers snag No. 7 seed, Bulls KO Hawks behind Coby White's career night
- What were Tom Selleck's juicy final 'Blue Bloods' words in Reagan family
- Shapiro aims to eliminate waiting list for services for intellectually disabled adults
Ranking
- Spooky or not? Some Choa Chu Kang residents say community garden resembles cemetery
- Is it Time to Retire the Term “Clean Energy”?
- Prince William Returns to Royal Duties Weeks After Kate Middleton’s Health Update
- Cardi B Details NSFW Way She Plans to Gain Weight After Getting Too Skinny
- US appeals court rejects Nasdaq’s diversity rules for company boards
- Takeaways from this week’s reports on the deadly 2023 Maui fire that destroyed Lahaina
- Millennials want to retire by 60. Good luck with that.
- John Lennon and Paul McCartney's sons Sean and James release first song together
Recommendation
Why we love Bear Pond Books, a ski town bookstore with a French bulldog 'Staff Pup'
Wednesday's NHL games: Austin Matthews looks to score his 70th goal against Lightning
Former Wisconsin Democratic Rep. Peter Barca announces new bid for Congress
YouTuber Abhradeep Angry Rantman Saha Dead at 27 After Major Surgery
From family road trips to travel woes: Americans are navigating skyrocketing holiday costs
Oklahoma man arrested after authorities say he threw a pipe bomb at Satanic Temple in Massachusetts
Unlike Deion Sanders, Nebraska coach Matt Rhule has been prolific in off-campus recruiting
Minnesota Wild sign goalie Marc-Andre Fleury to one-year extension