How Industry Coordinated to Deny Link Between Extreme Weather and Climate Change

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As climate lawsuits mount, at least one major oil company anticipated legal action decades ago.

Floodwaters cover an access road to oil refineries on September 25, 2005, in Port Arthur, Texas, in the aftermath of Hurricane Rita.

Nicky Sundt, a climate expert and former communications director for the U.S. Global Change Research Program during the George W. Bush administration, said she tried to publicly communicate the science behind that link, but was “stymied over and over again” by industry interests inside and outside the White House — an experience she has discussed with

But around the same time, the industry began to worry about how public understanding of those phenomena could affect their core business. A, a senior executive at Exxon, expressed concern that an extreme heat and drought event the year before had “drawn much attention to the potential problems and we’re starting to hear the inevitable call for action. Exactly what happens now is not clear… but this critical event has energized the greenhouse effort and raised public concern over PEG .

“As an organization rooted in science, AccuWeather’s view on global warming and extreme weather has evolved over the past three decades, as has the view of many other scientific organizations,” they said, noting that data now shows a “marked increase inInternal meeting notes

 

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