KEY POINTS
  • Three academics from Harvard and the University of Potsdam in Germany published a study in the journal Science on Thursday providing evidence that Exxon Mobil predicted global warming with incredible accuracy beginning in the late 1970s.
  • The report adds new details to previous reporting from Inside Climate News and others about how Exxon acknowledged human-caused climate change internally while denying it in public.
  • Exxon denies its wrongdoing, pointing to a court decision from 2019 that did not find the oil and gas company guilty of fraud in its climate change accounting.

In this article

Gas prices are displayed at an Exxon gas station on July 29, 2022 in Houston, Texas.

Three academics from Harvard and the University of Potsdam in Germany published a study in the journal Science on Thursday providing evidence that Exxon Mobil, the oil and gas behemoth with a current market capitalization of $466 billion, predicted global warming with incredible accuracy in a series of internal reports and messages starting in the 1970s.

"Specifically, what's new here is that we put a number on – and paint a picture of – what Exxon knew and when," said study co-author Geoffrey Supran, who worked as a research associate at Harvard when he did this work.

In this article