Calls for State to refuse ExxonMobil drilling license

April 3rd, 2019

The State should refuse an application from a project involving ExxonMobil to drill an exploratory oil well off the Cork coast due to the company’s climate record, Deputy Brid Smith has said.

The Department of Climate Action (DCCAE) received an application last
November from CNOOC Petroleum Europe and ExxonMobil for permission
to drill an exploratory well
in the Porcupine Basin area.

The proposed well falls within a 1,300 km2 area where CNOOC and ExxonMobil Exploration and Production Ireland (Offshore South) Ltd already have a frontier exploration license that runs until February 2033.

Ms Smith – who has tabled a Bill to ban the granting of new oil and gas exploration licenses – told The Green Newsthat granting the exploratory license now would be “disturbing” due to the company’s position on climate.

The Los Angeles Times and InsideClimate News recently revealed that Exxon understood that
its product was contributing to global warming in the 1970s but did not pass on
the information to the public.

According to documents obtained by reporters, Exxon’s own scientists informed company executives that the doubling of CO2 concentrations in the atmosphere would increase global temperatures by between two and three degrees Celsius.

“Exxon’s role in funding climate denial is well known, they have known about the consequences of climate change for decades and continued with the denial and obfuscation of the science,” Ms Smith added.

The Parliament’s debating chamber Photo: Diliff

European Parliament lobbying

The People Before Profit politician’s criticism follows calls to strip ExxonMobil lobbyists of access to the European Parliament after the company failed to appear at a recent hearing into claims that it deceived the public about the environmental impact of its product.

In its absence, activist and scientists told European lawmakers that
the oil giant has downplayed the impact of its activities on global warming for
decades, comparing it to the tobacco industry’s years of silence regarding the health
implications of smoking.

In a statement issued to Agence France-Presse, ExxonMobil
said that it was “constrained”
from attending the session due to “ongoing climate litigation in the United States”. The company said
that it feared its participation in the EU hearing “could prejudice those
pending proceedings”.

“That this company could face an EU Parliament ban for its failures speaks volumes. But the State has no problem handing over vast swathes of the Irish ocean to such a company to facilitate continued exploration for fossil fuels,” Ms Smith said.

MEPs Lynn Boylan and Mairead McGuinness at Brexit and Environment Conference in Dundalk, 2017 Photo: Niall Sargent
MEP Lynn Boylan (left) has spoken out against fossil fuel lobbyists in Europe Photo: Niall Sargent

The ‘new Big Tobacco’

Supporting the proposed ban for ExxonMobil lobbyists, Sinn Féin
MEP Lynn Boylan said that the EU should refuse to engage with the fossil fuel
industry in the same manner that it does with the tobacco lobby.  

“Big Oil is the
new Big Tobacco,” she said. “The fossil fuel industry’s tactics have been
extremely effective across the world for decades, funding climate denialism and
perpetuating climate inaction.”

“The evidence provided by the researchers and
scientists at the hearing shows how fossil fuel giants are literally drafting
our laws on climate and have, for decades, been confusing the climate science
in order to protect their own industry,” Ms Boylan continued.

During Dáil proceedings last week, Ms Smith asked the Minister of State with responsibility for Natural Resources Séan Canney TD if any departmental officials have held discussions with ExxonMobil about the license application.

Mr Canney said that officials would naturally meet with representatives
of companies holding licenses in the Irish offshore in “fulfilling their
functions in respect of the regulation of oil and gas exploration and
production”.

He said that neither himself nor the Minister for Climate Action
Richard Bruton TD have held discussions with ExxonMobil or CNOOC in respect of
this application.

About the Author

Shamim Malekmian

Shamim is a Senior Reporter at The Green News and a contributing writer to the Irish Examiner, Cork Evening Echo and the Dublin Inquirer.

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