Global Climate Coalition Meeting (2001)
A 2001 State Department briefing memo about a meeting with representatives of the Global Climate Coalition.
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A 2001 State Department briefing memo about a meeting with representatives of the Global Climate Coalition.
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The American Petroleum Institute’s draft Global Climate Science Communications Plan from 1998.
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The American Petroleum Institute’s “CO2 and Climate Task Force” (AQ-9) meeting minutes from March 18, 1980.
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A brief summary of Exxon’s position on the global warming in 1981.
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Exxon’s Harold Weinberg questions the concentration of CO2 in the ocean versus the atmosphere in a letter to his colleagues.
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A 1984 conference presentation called “CO2 Greenhouse and Climate Issues” by Exxon scientist Henry Shaw.
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Exxon scientist Brian Flannery reviews the company’s climate change research efforts in a presentation.
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A memo announcing Exxon’s decision to slash its CO2 budget.
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A letter announcing the termination of Exxon’s CO2 project aboard the Esso Atlantic tanker.
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In this scoping study, an Exxon manager recommends curtailing the company’s ambitious climate research agenda.
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Exxon officials proposed a publicity campaign to burnish the company’s image as a climate science leader.
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An Exxon researcher played a role as a Congressionally mandated commission examined policy options.
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Exxon’s top lobbyist urged the White House to replace holdovers from the Clinton-Gore administration, accusing them of political bias.
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Exxon’s leading climate scientist worked to overhaul the Bush-Cheney administration’s climate research strategy, focusing on uncertainty. The document was originally released to Greenpeace under the Freedom of Information Act.
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In 2002, Michael MacCracken, the government’s top climate scientist, wrote ExxonMobil’s board chairman a scathing letter about the company’s stance on climate science.
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James McCarthy, a Harvard scientist, board member of the Union of Concerned Scientists and president-elect of the American Association for the Advancement of Science, testified in 2007 about Exxon’s campaign of uncertainty at a congressional hearing.
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Ken Cohen, head of public and government affairs at Exxon, defended the company’s record on climate change.
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Bob Ward, the Royal Society’s communications director, complained that Exxon was distorting the science of climate change.
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