ExxonMobil has good reason to
celebrate its performance during 2005 - 36 billion reasons to be
exact. The oil giant announced the biggest profits in history,
but that's not the only record-breaker making headlines. A NASA
scientist has come forward and suggested that 2005 may be the hottest
year in more than a century, and he's not winning any popularity
contests for speaking out on global warming.
It's no surprise that Exxon is making money hand over fist. Oil
and gas prices skyrocketed during 2005, and Exxon's buddies over at the
Bush administration rewarded the oil giant with massive subsidies and
tax breaks. Despite these unprecedented profits, ExxonMobil still
hasn't ponied up the court-mandated settlement for the victims of the
Valdez spill nearly 17 years ago.
ExxonMobil isn't the only oil company in the black these days, but it
is the only one to hold the title "World's Number One Climate
Criminal." Exxon earned this reputation by using its profits to
undermine the science behind global warming and sabotage international
solutions. In fact, the oil giant admitted it has a "vested
interest in the outcome of the climate change debate."
The top scientists in the world agree that climate change is happening
and is caused in large part by human activities, like burning fossil
fuels. NASA's own Dr. James E. Hansen pointed out on December 15
that 2005 was probably the warmest year in at least a century.
Then during a lecture, he went on to call for prompt reductions in
emissions of greenhouse gases linked to global warming. Shortly
afterward, NASA had some policy changes - specifically, having the
public affairs staff review his coming lectures, papers, web postings
and interview requests. Dr. Hansen believes he is being silenced
for falling out of favor with the Bush administration.
One person not likely to be intimidated by President Bush's influence
is former President Bill Clinton. He remarked earlier this month,
"[Climate change is] the only thing that I believe has the power to
fundamentally end the march of civilization as we know it, and make a
lot of the other efforts that we're making irrelevant and impossible."
Take Action!
It's time that ExxonMobil took some of that massive profit and invested
it in clean, safe, renewable energy.
Write the new CEO of Exxon and
demand that the world's richest oil company stop funding junk science,
and start working on solutions.