Current:Home > ContactNew York AG: Exxon Climate Fraud Investigation Nearing End -Capital Dream Guides
New York AG: Exxon Climate Fraud Investigation Nearing End
View
Date:2025-04-18 01:53:50
A New York state judge ordered ExxonMobil on Wednesday to quickly turn over some of the documents sought by the state attorney general’s office, which is investigating whether the oil giant misled investors about the risks posed by climate change.
But Justice Barry R. Ostrager allowed the company to withhold one batch of the financial records, saying Exxon could instead respond to questions from the attorney general’s investigators about their contents.
Exxon agreed to turn over other records that it had provided to the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, which earlier this month ended its own investigation into the company’s climate accounting practices without taking action.
The mixed instructions came at a hearing in New York Supreme Court in Manhattan, where Ostrager began by urging prosecutors to quickly wrap up their investigation and decide whether to press charges against Exxon or move on.
“This cannot go on interminably,” he said. The company has provided millions of pages of documents and answered questions over some three years of investigation, Ostrager said. “It’s not my place to tell you when an investigation ends, but it is my place to put an end date on the requests for information and the filing of a complaint.”
Manisha M. Sheth, New York’s executive deputy attorney general for economic justice, responded that her office is in the final phases of the investigation. She said the office already had found “smoking guns” showing that Exxon had misled investors, but that it needed access to a list of internal spreadsheets.
Ostrager said Exxon must provide some of the spreadsheets within 30 days, and must answer prosecutors’ interrogatories—a set of questions about the remaining documents—within 35 days. Exxon had told the prosecutors that some of the data was readily available but that it would be burdensome to produce it all.
Calculating Climate Risk: What Exxon Told Investors
At the heart of the dispute are business records that the attorney general’s office said would show how Exxon calculated the financial impact of future climate regulations on its business.
Attorney General Barbara Underwood’s office wants Exxon to turn over cash flow spreadsheets that would reflect how the company incorporates proxy costs—a way of projecting the expected future costs of greenhouse gas emissions from regulations or carbon taxes—into its business planning.
Last year, the attorney general’s office filed documents accusing Exxon of using two sets of numbers for those proxy costs. The result, it said, was that Exxon misstated the risks and potential rewards of its energy projects.
“Exxon has repeatedly assured investors that it is taking active steps to protect the company’s value from the risk that climate change regulation poses to its business,” Underwood’s office wrote in a 30-page motion filed with the court in June.
Exxon has maintained that its use of different costs was not deceptive and was consistent with the company’s public statements. In one case, the company has said, it used an actual carbon tax enacted in Alberta, Canada, rather than the higher figures in its corporate proxy costs.
“We didn’t tell people we use $60 a ton or $40 a ton, we said we use costs where appropriate,” said Daniel J. Toal, a lawyer representing the company at the hearing on Wednesday. He said the degree to which the company complied with its own internal policies had no bearing on the investigation.
Judge Pressures Both Sides to Wrap It Up
Michael Gerrard, director of Columbia University’s Sabin Center for Climate Change Law, said after nearly three years of sparring in court it’s a practical matter for the judge to look for the finish line.
“The pressure is on both sides,” he said, adding that while Ostrager is urging investigators to end their work, he’s also requiring Exxon to provide additional documents and answers within a month to move the case along.
New York investigators, under the direction of then-Attorney General Eric Schneiderman, hit Exxon with the first subpoena in 2015. A second subpoena was issued in 2017. The two parties have been battling ever since, through filings and in hearings, about which documents specifically have to be produced. The Massachusetts Attorney General’s Office has a similar investigation underway.
On Wednesday, Ostrager left no doubt that he wants the New York investigation to conclude shortly, either by prosecutors bringing charges or dropping the case. “If you choose to bring a formal complaint,” he told the state’s lawyers, “this is going to be a 2019 trial.”
veryGood! (314)
Related
- Woman dies after Singapore family of 3 gets into accident in Taiwan
- Back in Black: Josh Jacobs ends holdout with the Raiders, agrees to one-year deal
- ‘He knew we had it in us’: Bernice King talks father Martin Luther King Jr.’s enduring ‘dream’
- 3 killed in racially-motivated shooting at Dollar General store in Jacksonville, sheriff says
- DeepSeek: Did a little known Chinese startup cause a 'Sputnik moment' for AI?
- Clark County teachers union wants Nevada governor to intervene in contract dispute with district
- Court-martial planned for former National Guard commander accused of assault, Army says
- South Carolina college student shot and killed after trying to enter wrong home, police say
- Intel's stock did something it hasn't done since 2022
- Biden is ‘old,’ Trump is ‘corrupt': AP-NORC poll has ominous signs for both in possible 2024 rematch
Ranking
- Macy's says employee who allegedly hid $150 million in expenses had no major 'impact'
- 12-year-old girl killed on couch after gunshots fired into Florida home
- Game show icon Bob Barker, tanned and charming host of 'The Price is Right,' dies at 99
- Kathy Griffin shocks her husband with lip tattoo results: 'It's a little swollen'
- In ‘Nickel Boys,’ striving for a new way to see
- Trump's social media attacks bring warnings of potential legal consequences
- Families mourn Jacksonville shooting victims, Tropical Storm Idalia forms: 5 Things podcast
- Travis Barker Kisses Pregnant Kourtney Kardashian's Bare Baby Bump in Sweet Photo
Recommendation
Spooky or not? Some Choa Chu Kang residents say community garden resembles cemetery
NASCAR driver Ryan Preece gets medical clearance to return home after terrifying crash at Daytona
Full transcript of Face the Nation, August 27, 2023
Multiple people killed in Jacksonville store shooting, mayor says; 2nd official says shooter is dead
Taylor Swift makes surprise visit to Kansas City children’s hospital
Jacksonville killings refocus attention on the city’s racist past and the struggle to move on
Trump campaign says it's raised $7 million since mug shot release
The towering legends of the Muffler Men