Not sure what newspaper this came out of, but there would appear to be no
doubt as to its accuracy:

WASHINGTON, May 27 � Exxon, the world's largest oil
and gas concern has increased donations to
Washington-based policy groups that, like Exxon
itself, question the human role in global warming and
argue that proposed government policies to limit
carbon dioxide emissions associated with global
warming are too heavy handed.

Exxon now gives more than $1 million a year to such
organizations, which include the Competitive
Enterprise Institute, Frontiers of Freedom, the George
C. Marshall Institute, the American Council for
Capital Formation Center for Policy Research and the
American Legislative Exchange Council.

The organizations are modest in size but have been
outspoken in the global warming debate. Exxon has
become the single-largest corporate donor to some of
the groups, accounting for more than 10 percent of
their annual budgets. While a few of the groups say
they also receive some money from other oil companies,
it is only a small fraction of what they receive from
Exxon Mobil....

Frontiers of Freedom, which has about a $700,000
annual budget, received $230,000 from Exxon in 2002,
up from $40,000 in 2001, according to Exxon documents....

The increase corresponds with a rising level of public
debate since the United States withdrew from the Kyoto
Protocol, some of the groups said. After President
Bush rejected the protocol, a treaty requiring nations
to limit emissions of heat-trapping gases, many
corporations shifted their attention to Washington,
where the debate has centered on proposals for
domestic curbs on the emissions...

Exxon's publicly disclosed documents reveal that
donations to many of these organizations increased by
more than 50 percent from 2000 to 2002. And money to
the American Legislative Exchange Council, a
conservative group that works with state legislators,
has almost tripled, as the policy debate has moved to
the state level...

The donations in the tens of thousands or hundreds of thousands of
dollars are
significant for groups with budgets ranging from $700,000 to $4 million.

Critics say that Exxon and these groups continue to
muddle the debate even as scientific consensus has
emerged, and as much of the industry has taken a more
conciliatory stance toward the reality of global
warming. As Exxon has become isolated from its peers,
it has faced increasing pressure from shareholders and
environmentalists. BP, Shell and ChevronTexaco have
developed strategies that incorporate renewable
energy, carbon trading and emissions reductions.

Among the initiatives that Exxon's money has helped is
the Center for Science and Public Policy. The
two-month-old center is a one-man operation that
brings scientists to Capitol Hill on two issues:
global warming and the health effects of mercury.

"We don't lobby, we educate," said Bob Ferguson, head
of the center, who spent 24 years working as a
Republican Congressional staff member. "We try to be
nonpolitical and nonpartisan and nonideological."   [Yea right -- Not!]

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