Big Oil and Gas Kept a Dirty Secret for Decades. Now They May Pay the Price.


Covering Climate NowThis story originally appeared in The Guardian and is republished here as part of Covering Climate Now, a global journalism collaboration co-founded by The Nation and Columbia Journalism Review to strengthen coverage of the climate emergency.

After a century of wielding extraordinary economic and political power, America’s petroleum giants face a reckoning for driving the greatest existential threat of our lifetimes.

An unprecedented wave of lawsuits filed by cities and states across the United States aims to hold the oil and gas industry to account for the environmental devastation caused by fossil fuels—and covering up what they knew along the way.

Coastal cities struggling to keep rising sea levels at bay, Midwestern states watching “mega-rains” destroy crops and homes, and fishing communities losing catches to warming waters, are now demanding that the oil conglomerates pay damages and take urgent action to reduce further harm from burning fossil fuels.

But, even more strikingly, the nearly two dozen lawsuits are underpinned by accusations that the industry severely aggravated the environmental crisis with a decades-long campaign of lies and deceit to suppress warnings from their own scientists about the impact of fossil fuels on the climate and dupe the American public.

The environmentalist Bill McKibben once characterized the fossil fuel industry’s behavior as “the most consequential cover-up in US history.” And now for the first time in decades, the lawsuits chart a path toward public accountability that climate activists say has the potential to rival Big Tobacco’s downfall after it concealed the real dangers of smoking.

“We are at an inflection point,” said Daniel Farber, a law professor at the University of California, Berkeley, and director of the Center for Law, Energy, and the Environment.

“Things have to get worse for the oil companies,” he added. “Even if they’ve got a pretty good chance of winning the litigation in places, the discovery of pretty clear-cut wrongdoing—that they knew their product was bad and they were lying to the public—really weakens the industry’s ability to resist legislation and settlements.”

For decades, the country’s leading oil and gas companies have understood the science of climate change and the dangers posed by fossil fuels. Year after year, top executives heard it from their own scientists, whose warnings were explicit and often dire.

In 1979, an Exxon study said that burning fossil fuels “will cause dramatic environmental effects” in the coming decades.

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