ExxonMobil criticised Greenpeace, the Kyoto treaty and the European carbon trading system yesterday but insisted it was not a "climate change denier" and said it wanted to play a constructive role in countering global warming.
The world's biggest non-state-owned oil group said its position on global warming had been repeatedly misunderstood and it had come to accept there should be a US federal - and preferably global - carbon tax through a cap-and-trade system.
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The firm's funding of third-party thinktanks, which have produced papers questioning the human role in climate change, has recently been heavily criticised in a Greenpeace report. Exxon retaliated yesterday by saying some of Greenpeace's facts were "just flat wrong" and in one case "absurd", though the company hinted that it may stop funding the controversial thinktanks.
"For you to suggest we should stop funding all groups and Greenpeace to cherry-pick which groups we can fund or not, I reject that," said Mr Cohen,
who would not say whether the more controversial thinktanks such as the Heartland Institute and the George C Marshall Institute would lose donations. (Ed. - emphasis added).
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http://business.guardian.co.uk/story/0,,2103541,00.htmlEDIT
In 2005 the company withdrew support for the Competitive Enterprise Institute, which the following year ran an advertising campaign promoting carbon dioxide, which said "we call it life".
It still funds groups such as the Heartland Institute, which describes global warming as "a prime example of the alarmism that characterises much of the environmental movement". But Cohen said Exxon had only ever funded such groups because they were against the Kyoto Protocol on global warming, negotiated in the late 1990s, and which Exxon still rejects -- and not because they cast doubt on climate change.
"We started funding a number of these groups because we were opposed to the Kyoto Protocol. We were slow to stop funding."
Exxon could terminate its support of more groups, Cohen added -- "It's a question we're asking ourselves," he said.
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http://www.planetark.org/dailynewsstory.cfm/newsid/42616/story.htm