Oil executives testify on climate crisis: Live updates | CNN Politics

Oil executives testify about climate disinformation

ROTTERDAM, NETHERLANDS - APRIL 23: A general view of Gunvor Petroleum or Rozenburg refinery, owned by Kuwait Petroleum Europort BV which is a subsidiary of Kuwait Petroleum International, sometimes referred to as the Europort refinery in the Port of Rotterdam which also home to other large companies producing petrol, diesel and oil including Vopakat, BP (British Petrolium), Guvnor Petroleum, VPR Engery, Exxonmobil or Exxon Mobil, ESSO and Shell which all remain active for business during the coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic on April 23, 2020 in Rotterdam, Netherlands. Europe's largest port covers 105 square kilometres (41 square miles) and stretches over a distance of 40 kilometres (25 miles). (Photo by Dean Mouhtaropoulos/Getty Images)
Exxon CEO testimony 'very close to an outright lie' says climate journalist
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ROTTERDAM, NETHERLANDS - APRIL 23: A general view of Gunvor Petroleum or Rozenburg refinery, owned by Kuwait Petroleum Europort BV which is a subsidiary of Kuwait Petroleum International, sometimes referred to as the Europort refinery in the Port of Rotterdam which also home to other large companies producing petrol, diesel and oil including Vopakat, BP (British Petrolium), Guvnor Petroleum, VPR Engery, Exxonmobil or Exxon Mobil, ESSO and Shell which all remain active for business during the coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic on April 23, 2020 in Rotterdam, Netherlands. Europe's largest port covers 105 square kilometres (41 square miles) and stretches over a distance of 40 kilometres (25 miles). (Photo by Dean Mouhtaropoulos/Getty Images)
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What we covered here

  • The heads of six oil companies and major lobbying groups testified before the House Oversight Committee about climate disinformation and their organizations’ role in it. 
  • The committee’s chair announced she plans to subpoena oil companies and trade groups for key documents related to their conduct around the climate crisis. 
  • Today’s hearing was part of the panel’s investigation into the fossil fuel industry and was held just days before the crucial international climate talks of world leaders at the UN’s COP26 summit in Scotland.

Our live coverage of the hearing has ended. Read the posts below to see how it unfolded.

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House Oversight Chair Maloney intends to subpoena oil companies for key documents

House Oversight Committee Chair Carolyn Maloney, a Democrat from New York, announced at the end of Thursday’s hearing that she plans to subpoena oil companies and trade groups for key documents related to their conduct around the climate crisis. 

The New York Democrat said she sees “no choice” but to continue the investigation and issue subpoenas because the companies and entities have not disclosed the documents requested voluntarily. 

“Unfortunately, none of the six entities have produced a substantial portion of the key documents the committee requested,” Maloney said. “Instead, they produced reams of other documents, many of which were publicly available.”

The six entities that voluntarily appeared at the hearing were: ExxonMobil, BP America, Chevron, Shell Oil, the American Petroleum Institute and the US Chamber of Commerce. 

Specifically, Maloney said the oil companies have not produced “detailed funding information” the lawmakers requested to understand their “payments to shadow groups,” public relations firms and others.

Other documents requested include corporate strategies around climate change and internal documents and communications from senior executives about their companies’ role in the climate crisis. 

“I have tried very hard to obtain this information voluntarily, but the oil companies employ the same tactics they used for decades on climate policy: delay and obstruction,” Maloney said.

Rep. Cori Bush: "This is a striking example of White supremacy"

Democratic Rep. Cori Bush of Missouri used her time to highlight the role the fossil fuel industry has played in causing disproportionate harm toward historically marginalized communities. 

“Is an oil refinery more likely to be situated in a Black community or White community?” Bush asked Big Oil executives. “It’s Black,” she answered after a delay in response from witnesses.

According to a 2017 report from the NAACP and the Clean Air Task Force, which Bush cited, Black Americans are 75% more likely than other Americans to live in what’s called “fenceline communities,” which are areas located near industrial facilities and hazardous waste sites.

Researchers also found that Black people breathe 56% more pollution than they cause, while White people breathe 17% less pollution than they generate.

For instance, the Black communities situated along Louisiana’s “Cancer Alley,” the 85-mile stretch between New Orleans and Baton Rouge that’s home to more than 150 chemical plants and oil refineries, have for decades blamed the fossil fuel industry for causing the growing rate of cancer and respiratory illnesses in the area.

According to the Environmental Protection Agency’s 2019 environmental justice dataeight of the nation’s top 14 block groups — census areas that typically contain 600 to 3,000 people — with the country’s estimated highest cancer risks are in St. John Parish in “Cancer Alley.”

“For years, you all have continued to promote fossil fuels despite knowing that promoting means promoting environmental racism and violence in Black and brown communities,” Bush told the fossil fuel executives. “You want to continue promoting and selling fossil fuels that are killing millions of people.”

“This is a striking example of White supremacy,” she added. “Your profit driven choices threaten my life and my family, my neighbors and our communities every single day.”

Democratic lawmaker asks API CEO why he supports federal methane regulations but opposes a methane fee

The Biden administration and Democrats are trying to cut potent greenhouse gas methane through a number of means – including executive and legislative action. 

The US Environmental Protection Agency is expected to soon announce new regulations on methane, limiting the amount of leaks oil and gas producers can emit into the atmosphere.

Additionally, Biden’s just-released Build Back Better Act framework includes a gradually increasing methane fee levied on oil and gas companies, as well as $775 million of incentives to help the companies comply.

Democratic Rep. Debbie Wasserman-Schutz of Florida said while many oil and gas companies are supportive of the forthcoming federal regulations, they oppose the methane fee.  

“Here’s a bewildering example of hypocrisy,” Wasserman-Schultz said. “The Build Back Better Act contains provisions to tackle methane pollution from oil and natural gas production, which API claims to support. Yet API and its front group Energy Citizens have carried out a seven-figure TV and ad campaign to defeat the Build Back Better methane emissions fee.” 

Wasserman Schultz asked API CEO Mike Sommers how he reconciled those two positions. 

“In fact, the American Petroleum Institute supports the federal regulation of methane for both new and existing sources,” Sommers responded. “We expect the new regulation to come out soon from the Biden administration, and we’ve been working with them on making sure that that regulation makes sense, and that it’s reducing methane emissions over time.” 

The problem with methane

Methane — the main component of natural gas — is invisible and odorless, and has 80 times more warming power in the near-term than carbon dioxide.

With Earth rapidly approaching the 1.5-degree-Celsius threshold above preindustrial levels, scientists tell CNN that methane emissions need to be reduced fast.

“The fastest way that we might mitigate some of the climate change that we’re seeing already in the short term is by reducing methane,” Charles Koven, a lead author on August’s IPCC report, told CNN. “If we were to reduce methane emissions, it would act to offset one of these sources of warming.”

If the world stopped emitting carbon dioxide tomorrow, Koven said, global temperatures wouldn’t begin to cool for many years because of how long the gas stays in the atmosphere. Reducing methane is the easiest knob to turn to change the path of global temperature in the next 10 years, he said.

Methane is in the gas we use to fuel our stoves and heat our homes, but it can also be produced in nature from volcanoes and decomposing plant matter. But it is also pumped into the atmosphere in much larger amounts by landfills, livestock and the oil and gas industry.

Read more: Scientists say this invisible gas could seal our fate on climate change

Scientists have showed the climate crisis is happening now — not in decades

Republican Rep. Pat Fallon used a portion of his time to say that the “dire predictions” of the climate crisis haven’t and won’t come true.

But in August, the UN’s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) delivered a clear message: Human-caused climate change is undoubtedly intensifying extreme weather events around the planet. 

Earth is now 1.1 degrees Celsius warmer than pre-industrial levels and is rapidly barreling toward the critical threshold of 1.5 degrees, the report concludes, which countries in the Paris Agreement agreed was the ideal limit to stave off the worst impacts of the crisis. 

Global scientists concluded that only by making deep cuts to greenhouse gas emissions, particularly from burning fossil fuels, while also removing carbon dioxide from the atmosphere, can we halt the precipitous trend.

This summer, the United States has been battered by large wildfires, deadly flooding events from the Gulf Coast to the Northeast and a historic, multi-year drought that has impacted water supply, food production and electricity generation across the Western states.

In June, an unprecedented heat wave in the Northwest United States killed hundreds of people and shattered records in Oregon, Washington and Idaho. Scientists at World Weather Attribution concluded the heat wave would have been “virtually impossible” without human-caused climate change.

Now more than ever, scientists are able to quantify the connection between the climate crisis and deadly extreme weather.

AOC to Big Oil: Some of us have to "live in the future that you all are setting on fire"

Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez speaks on Capitol Hill, Thursday, October 28.

Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez called out oil executives for fighting legislation aimed at saving the planet from the climate crisis.

The New York Democrat cited lobbying reports that indicate the oil industry spent more than $55 million in lobbying over the last 10 months.

She also pointed to comments made by American Petroleum Institute CEO Mike Sommers to CNN about attempts to fight climate provisions in Democrats’ sweeping climate and social spending bill.

“We’re leaving everything on the field here in terms of our opposition to anti-energy provisions,” Sommers said earlier this month.

Ocasio-Cortez told Sommers: “I appreciate your candor because most lobbying organizations are not as forthright and transparent about their efforts.”

To prove her point, Ocasio-Cortez pointed to a covertly filmed job interview that emerged over the summer where Exxon lobbyist Keith McCoy likened lobbying to fishing, where the company tries to “kind of reel them in.”

McCoy said he talked to Sen. Joe Manchin’s office every week. (Manchin has since opposed key climate provisions in the spending bill).

ExxonMobil CEO Darren Woods denied being aware of weekly calls with members of Congress, though he conceded having calls with lawmakers. He said political donations are not discussed during the calls. 

“We do not have the privilege or the luxury of lobbying spin,” Ocasio-Cortez said.

"Y'all hide and you deceive": House Democrat slams oil CEOs for using front group

Rep. Rashida Tlaib speaks on Capitol Hill, Thursday, October 28.

Rep. Rashida Tlaib went after oil executives for using front groups to fight environmental rules.

The Democrat from Michigan said major oil companies and trade groups funded One Alaska, Colorado Rising and other groups that opposed tougher regulation.

Chevron CEO Mike Wirth noted that his company did not own Noble Energy at the time Tlaib says Noble was funding the Colorado group.

“You’ve been provided with some inaccurate information,” Wirth said.

Tlaib accused Chevron of owing $50 billion for committing 70 serious cases of environmental abuse in 31 countries.

“When are you going to cut the $50 billion check you owe? It went through the courts!” Tlaib said.

Wirth said he has “no understanding” of where Tlaib came up with those figures but offered to get back to her.

“You made what, $29 million last year poisoning the planet,” Tlaib said.

The Michigan Democrat pointed out the recent sentencing of an environmental activist who won a $9.5 billion settlement against Chevron.

“Mr Wirth, you can’t arrest us all,” Tlaib said. “There are more of us than there are of you. You can poison the planet so you can make money, but we’re going to defend the planet so we can live. And we will win.”

Republican lawmaker whose district is vulnerable to flooding delivers impassioned defense of oil companies

Republican Rep. Clay Higgins of Louisiana – whose constituents face some of the highest flooding risk in the country – delivered an impassioned defense of oil executives on Thursday. 

“It’s abhorrent my colleagues across the aisle have called a so-called hearing today to demonize American industry whose products make modern life possible,” Higgins said. “Petroleum products are in everything: The clothes on our backs, the wiring in our computers, our computers themselves, our phones, all the equipment used by the military, all medical supplies and equipment – paint, curtains, fabrics and appliances in our homes, fishing rods, lures, tents used by sportsmen, all sports products.” 

Higgins continued:  

Higgins represents an area very vulnerable to climate change impacts. Cameron Parish in southwest Louisiana — which is part of Higgins’ district — is the most vulnerable county in the US to flood risk, according to a recent nationwide flooding analysis by nonprofit research and technology group First Street.  

First Street’s report found more than 94% of all critical infrastructure in Cameron Parish — including police and fire stations — are at risk of being knocked offline due to flooding. 

Republican representative apologizes to fossil fuel CEOs

Rep. Pete Sessions, a Republican from Texas, apologized to the fossil fuel executives for what he called “intimidation” from Democrats on the committee.

Rep. Katie Porter uses M&Ms and bags of rice in questioning of oil executives

California Democratic Rep. Katie Porter grilled oil company CEOs and lobbyists who are testifying to Congress today, using a jar of M&Ms and bags of rice in her car to make her point.

Porter used the jar of M&Ms to illustrate the amount of money that Shell will spend on renewable energy ($2-3 billion, according to Shell Oil Company President Gretchen Watkins) compared to oil, gas and chemical operations ($16-17 billion plus $ 3 billion marketing, according to its annual report, Porter said) this year.

Watkins said there needs to be “both a demand and a supply of clean energy” and the company is working with customers to increase demand.

Porter called it “greenwashing.”

Porter then asked American Petroleum Institute President and CEO Mike Sommers about public land leased by fossil fuel companies, opening her car trunk to show bags of rice to illustrate the acreage of land.

She asked executives if they support a pause on new oil and gas leases on federal land.

Watch:

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Democratic lawmaker tries to pin CEOs on climate denial

Rep. Jamie Raskin speaks on Capitol Hill, Thursday, October 28.

At Thursday’s hearing, Rep. Jamie Raskin, a Democrat from Maryland, tried to tie climate change denial to a larger effort by former President Donald Trump and the Republican party to deny the legitimacy of the 2020 election.  

And Raskin, a former constitutional law professor, said the First of Amendment does not protect “fraudulent commercial speech, despite everything you heard today.” 

Raskin asked the fossil fuel CEOs if they accept this fact.  

Four CEOs told Raskin they were not experts in constitutional law or lawyers, not directly answering his question. Raskin also directly questioned ExxonMobil CEO Darren Woods about the company’s litigation with the state of Massachusetts, where Raskin said the company has used the First Amendment “as a sword” in their legal battles. 

“I don’t believe companies should lie and I’ll tell you we do not do that,” Woods answered, as Raskin pressed him on what he believed should happen if a company were to lie.  

Raskin pointed out that scientists have been clear that the climate crisis is here – with extreme weather and increasing temperatures already being felt in the US and around the globe. He added that as the government tries to address climate change, he hopes fossil fuel companies will not lie about their actions. 

“We cannot afford any more propaganda campaigns by corporations subsidized by the government against public policies designed to save humanity,” Raskin said.  

"Crickets": Oil CEOs don't say how much they receive in government fossil fuel subsidies

Four oil CEOs did not directly answer a Democratic lawmaker asking how much they get in annual fossil fuel subsidies from the federal government. 

Democratic Rep. Jim Cooper from Tennessee asked the CEOs if they could tell lawmakers how much money they get from the federal government each year, noting the low estimate is $20 billion a year, but the International Monetary Fund estimates US oil companies get about $650 billion in both direct and indirect subsidies. 

“Can the four key oil executives agree on the amount by which they are subsidized, at least in the United States by the US taxpayer?” Cooper asked. “Is it $20 billion or is it $650 billion?” 

No one answered him. 

“Crickets,” Cooper said. “None of you have any idea how much you’re being subsidized by the US taxpayer?” 

“Congressman, our products are taxed, not subsidized,” Chevron CEO Michael Wirth responded. “And I can tell you that a number of the policies that get described as subsidies are very similar to those available to other industries and other companies, and they’re important for American energy security, American energy investments, and American energy supply.”

Earlier, Cooper asked the CEOs how much of a price they would suggest put on carbon, as carbon pricing is something oil companies have publicly supported. CEOs did not answer Cooper with a direct price.  

"Are you embarrassed?" Ro Khanna slams Exxon and Chevron for production plans

Democratic Rep. Ro Khanna speaks on Capitol Hill on Thursday, October 28.

Democratic Rep. Ro Khanna urged US oil giants ExxonMobil and Chevron to follow in the footsteps of their European rivals in planning to cut production to address the climate crisis.

The Chevron boss responded by pointing out that demand for energy is going up around the world.

Khanna cited calls from the United Nations and the International Energy Agency to cut oil and gas production to save the planet.

When Khanna asked if Chevron would commit to lowering production, Wirth declined to do so.

“With all due respect, I’m very proud of our company and what we do,” Wirth said.

Exxon CEO Darren Woods similarly declined to commit to reducing production of oil.

“We are committed to lowering our emissions,” Woods said.

The answers contrasted with those from the executives of BP and Shell, who acknowledged that their companies do plan to reduce production of oil and gas.

Republican Rep. Jim Jordan slammed the line of questioning from Khanna, noting that Democrats have also pushed OPEC to pump more oil to combat high gasoline prices.

“That may be the dumbest thing I’ve ever heard,” Jordan said. “What does the gentleman want? $8 gasoline?”

Khanna met with silence after asking oil CEOs to stop funding groups spreading climate denial

Democratic Rep. Ro Khanna was met with silence from the oil industry executives when he asked them to tell the American Petroleum Institute and other groups to stop lobbying against electric vehicles and methane regulations – two initiatives the oil companies themselves support. 

“You could do something here,” said Khanna, who chairs the House Oversight Committee’s Subcommittee on the Environment. “You can tell them to knock it off for the sake of the planet. You could end that lobbying. Would any of you take that opportunity to look at API and say ‘stop it?’” 

The committee room fell silent. 

“Any of you?” he asked. “Could you commit? Any of you?”

No CEO responded to Khanna’s question. 

The Democrat from California also asked fossil fuel companies to commit to having an independent audit to verify none of their funding was going toward groups spreading climate denial, and was again met with silence.  

Many oil companies are members of the American Petroleum Institute, which has been lobbying against certain initiatives that are part of President Joe Biden’s economic and climate agenda framework.

Khanna later asked Shell Oil president Gretchen Watkins to commit to no longer funding “any group that’s going to engage in climate disinformation.” 

“Chairman Khanna, what I’ll commit to is continuing to be an active member of the API,” Watkins said. 

Chevron Corporation CEO Michael Wirth said, “We don’t control and may not always agree with the positions taken or statements made by industry groups and other organizations. We engage in constructive dialogue.” 

Rep. Khanna asks ExxonMobil CEO to admit to "mistake"

Democratic Rep. Ro Khanna confronted ExxonMobil CEO Darren Woods on research the company had as early as 1977, which said the most likely cause of climate change was through the burning of fossil fuels.

Woods agreed with that conclusion.

He then pivoted to something former ExxonMobil CEO Lee Raymond said in 2002, that “he does not believe ‘that the science establishes the linkage between fossil fuels and warming.’”

“I really don’t want to dwell on the past,” Khanna said, “but in the spirit of giving you the chance to turn the page for the company, I assume you would acknowledge that Mr. Raymond’s statement was a mistake, and the company regrets it, correct?”

“I don’t think it’s fair to judge something 45 years ago,” Woods replied.

Democrats play video of ExxonMobil lobbyist saying they "aggressively" fought against some climate science 

House Oversight Committee Carolyn Maloney played a video of former ExxonMobil lobbyist Keith McCoy saying the company “aggressively” fought back against some climate science. 

McCoy added Exxon was “looking out for our investments.” 

Maloney said that oil companies disinformation on climate science has continued more recently, playing the McCoy video to underscore that point. 

“Our witnesses today would like you to think that their actions I have laid out and put in the record are ancient history, but they’re not,” Maloney said.  

Watch:

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Maloney presses Exxon CEO on inconsistencies between its own science and its public statements

 House Oversight Committee Chair Carolyn Maloney speaks during the hearing on Thursday, October 28.

Maloney pressed ExxonMobil CEO Darren Woods on public statements that the company’s former CEO, Lee Raymond, made in the mid-1990s, versus what Exxon’s own scientists were reporting to the company.

Maloney: “As the world was debating an agreement to reduce greenhouse gas emissions, known as the Kyoto Protocol, here’s what Mr. Raymond said in 1996, and I quote: ‘Currently, the scientific evidence is inconclusive as to whether human activities are having a sig effect on the global climate,’ end quote.”

Maloney shared what she called a “secret briefing” from Exxon scientists in 1978 that said: “There’s a general scientific agreement that the most likely manner in which mankind is influencing the global climate is through car dioxide release from the burning of fossil fuels.”

She asked Woods whether the former CEO’s remarks were inconsistent with the views of Exxon’s scientists.

Woods responded: “No, I do not agree that there was an inconsistency. … And I think our position has continued to evolve with the scientific community.”

The panel was asked if climate change is an existential threat. Here's how they responded.

Rep. Carolyn Maloney asked the six representatives from oil companies and lobbying groups who are testifying in front of Congress:

They responded with silence.

“So, the truth is clear: Climate change is real, burning fossil fuels is the primary cause of this crisis and it is urgent that we fix it. This is the first time each of you has told Congress this … and it is significant and important,” Maloney said.

Immediately beforehand, she asked them questions about the reality of climate change and if burning of fossil fuels is a driving force behind it.

Former Keystone XL welder concerned about job loss in energy sector

Neal Crabtree, a former Keystone XL Pipeline welder.

Neal Crabtree, a former Keystone XL Pipeline welder, said he lost his job on the project “three hours after President Biden’s inauguration.”

Crabtree expressed concern about Biden’s economic and climate package and the way it would affect workers in the energy sector.

“I’ve spent over 25 years, you know, developing the skills that I have, and I’m compensated well for it. And the government’s idea of shutting down my industry and retraining me in another career — it’s not realistic,” Crabtree said. “I’m too far in life … It’s just not realistic for me.”

US Chamber of Commerce CEO says climate solutions should be bipartisan

US Chamber of Commerce CEO Suzanne Clark.

US Chamber of Commerce CEO Suzanne Clark said that efforts to combat climate change should be ones Democrats and Republicans can agree on.

Clark said the Chamber supports Biden’s bipartisan infrastructure bill, but did not mention support for the president’s recently released economic and climate agenda framework – which contains $555 billion for climate and clean energy provisions, including over $300 billion in clean energy and electric vehicle tax credits. 

“We advocate for our members’ interests across a wide range of policy areas, including on climate and energy issues, and we promote initiatives that help create jobs and grow our economy,” Clark said.  

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